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THE RAIDER — 1974
SOMERSET HIGH SCHOOL
Each moment in life
waits and beckons to
us to come forward and
taste. Yes, taste
every new experience
that life may offer.
Although life in its
essence is short, our
experience need not be,
for "as time goes on
we may capture
these moments and build . . .
grow . . .
live. . .”
I
!
r
d
7
r 1 If t iB
iinf/
1 1 limil
1974 Man
Of The Year
Mr. Richard Smith,
The senior class at Somerset High School would like to extend our appreciation to you for the
fine talent you possess in making your classes interesting as well as informative. This important
element combined with the spirit and enthusiasm which you exhibit in and outside the classroom
does not go unnoticed by the student body. The extra effort you exert is well appreciated by the
senior class. We are honored to dedicate these pages to you. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Class of 1974
Mr. Carl McDermott
12
To the Class of 1974,
You have been citizens of the Somerset High
School community and you must now go on to
assume your places of responsibility and prod¬
uctivity in a larger community whether it be fur¬
ther schooling or the world of work.
Each day will continue to present new chal¬
lenges that must be met if you are to attain your
goals in life. Meet them with enthusiasm and
with faith in your convictions.
Your editorial staff is to be commended for
the very fine book representing your class history
at Somerset High School. May it serve to remind
you of a dedicated faculty who will long remem¬
ber the class of 1974.
Sincerely yours,
Carl W. McDermott
13
EDWARD J. KAYLOR
SECONDARY SCHOOL SUPERVISOR
THOMAS E. DALEY
ASSISTANT TO SUPERINTENDENT
A dministration
FRANCIS J. KILGREW
SUPERINTENDENT
^'1 I I I,
14
i ‘
I
1
|U»M«
EDWARD L. SULLIVAN
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
SALVATORE PETRILLO
VICE-PRINCIPAL
RICHARD D. MAHONEY
VICE-PRINCIPAL
15
FACULTY
The faculty at Somerset High School is a unique group of individuals. They strive to meet the students’ needs and in so
doing promote an atmosphere that is friendly and congenial.
Many are interested and show concern for the individual student. Their effort is reflected in the varied tasks that they arc
asked to perform outside the classroom. TTiey arc willing to give freely of their own time for the students’, benefit. We
appreciate their efforts and extend our thanks.
MRS. PATRICIA CORVELLO
MR. WILUAM SULLIVAN
DEPT. HEAD
MISS SHARON HAMLEN
MR. HARVEY ALDEN
MR. RICHARD La MOTHE
18
J
T
MRS. CHERYL MODZELEWSKI
li
MRS. ELIZABETH SMITH
MRS. ALBERTA PERRY
DEAN OF WOMEN
MRS. MARJORIE STRICKMAN
MISS ANN SCANLON
MRS. FLORENCE TAYLOR
19
I
MR. PAUL McMANUS
DEPT. HEAD
MR. ROBERT CROUCH
MR. RICHARD BREZINSKI
MR. JOHN DRISCOLL
Social
Studies
MISS ROXANNE FERREIRA
MR. RAYMOND GAUDREAU
MR. EDMOND GOULART
MR. JAMES HENRY
20
7”
■ •%
I
MR. THOMAS BURNS
DEPT. HEAD
MRS. SHEILA DESROSIERS
MRS. BEVERLY CARON
MISS MARY CROSSON
Math
MR. JAY KELLEY
MRS. CAROL KIDD MRS. EILEEN LAFEUR MR. RAYMOND McDONALD
22
MRS. IRMA MELLO
MR. PATRICK MERCIER MR. RAYMOND MOTHA
MR. GERALD ST. ARMAND
MR. ALFRED ZAGORSKI
PERMANENT SUBSTITUTES
MR. PAUL MARCHAND
MR. ANTHONY NUNES
MR. LAWRENCE THOMAS
23
MR. JAMES SULLIVAN
DEPT. HEAD
MR. GARY DREWNIAK
MR. ROBERT J. BREAULT
Science
Dept.
MR. DAVID CHAUVETTE
MR. JOSEPH HNGUSS
24
i
r
!•
1
ii
r
I
MR. MILTON ROCHA MRS. JOANNE SILVIA
MR. GREGORY SQUILLANTE
MR. DAVID PEREIRA
MR. DONALD McNAMARA
i
25
1
MR. EDWARD WARD
DEPT. HEAD
MRS. HAIDEE GILL DEJESUS
MRS. CYNTHIA LAMOUREUX
MR. CHARLES LEVESQUE
MRS. CECILE McNAMARA
MISS GERTRUDE O’NEIL
I
MR. HERVE LAVOIE
MISS LORETTE NOWACKI
MR. DOUGLAS RAPOSE
MRS. JEAN MITCHELL
LIBRARIAN
MR. DAVID KNECHT
AUDIO-VISUAL
MRS. ELVIRA MACHADO 27
DRESSMAKING
G
u
I
d
a
n
c
e
M
u
s
I
c
MR. WILLIAM BARRAR
MR. EDWARD SANDOMERSKI
CHAIRMAN
MR. DAVID MOLLOY
ADJUSTMENT COUNSELLOR
MRS. ANNA DANIELSON
1
(
I
28
MR. ROBERT PERRY
DIRECTOR OF MUSIC
MR. BRUCE MAGGS
1
MR. DAVID ROBINSON
MR. JAMES WHITE
DEPT. HEAD
MRS. AMY GOULART
MR. RICHARD WORTON
Industrial
Arts
MR. KAISER SHAHDAN
DR. DAVID CUaNOTTA
DIRECTOR OF READING
MR. PAUL AUDETTE
MR. WILLIAM REED
MISS ANNE HORRIGAN
30
«
MR. ALBERT ESTES
DEPT. HEAD
MR. KENNETH DAY
MS. SHEILA FITZGERALD
MR. WHITNEY HORTON
MR. ROBERT LANE
MISS KATHLEEN GOODWIN
MR. THEODORE PORADA
MRS. MARCIA SALMON
HEALTH
c
o
o
P
e
r
a
t
i
V
e
32
MRS. IRENE MORGAN R.N. MRS. MILDRED BROUGH R.N.
Secretaries
MRS. JUNE O’KEEFE
MRS. LORRAINE TALBOT
MRS. VIVIAN WINSLOW
MRS. AUDREY BURHOE
MRS. LAVONNE LORD
MRS. BEATRICE CORREA
MRS. MARY CURT
MRS. LOUISE HAMILTON
33
/ aint lookin to compete with you^
beat or cheat or mistreat you^
simplify you^ classify you^
deny^ defy^ or crucify you.
I aint lookin to fight ivith you^
frighten you or uptighten you.,
drag you down or bring you down^
chain you down or bring you down.
I ainh lookin to block you up^
shock, or knock, or lock you up,
analyze, categorize you, finalize you,
or advertise you.
I don t want to straight-face you,
race, or chase you, track or trace you,
or disgrace you or displace you,
or define you, or confine you.
I don’t want to meet your kind,
make you spin or do you in,
or select you, or dissect you,
or inspect you, or reject you.
I don t want to fake you out,
take, or shake or forsake you out,
I ain’t lookin for you to feel like me,
see like me, or be like me.
Dylan
All I really ivant to do
is baby be friends with you.
Tl
Brian C. Abal-o
"It matters not what yo\ are thought to be, but
what you are.”
Publius Sysus
Curt R. Ainsworth
Robert J. Albany
"We shall have no better conditions in the
future if we are satisfied with all those we have
at present.”
Beverly J. Almeida
"Love is a platform upon which all ranks meet.”
W. S. Gilbert
Allan A. Amaral
"You have the freedom to be yourself here and
now.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Valerie Amaral
". . . And the people — who hide themselves
behind a wall of illusion. Never glimpse the
truth — then it’s far too late — when they pass
away.”
George Harrison
36
[
[
Gary Angelini
Anne Marie J. Arruda
"The shine that is worth praises of earth is one
that shines through tears.”
Ella W. Wilfred
Dale E. Arnida
"Justice is truth in action.”
Benjamin Disraeli
Margaret Armda
"Together we flow like a river, and together we
melt like the snow.”
Traffic
William A. Auger
"Who so neglects learning in his youth, loses the
past and is dead for the future.”
Euripides
Donna L. Barlow
"Life is the mirror of king and slave; ’Tis just
what we are and we do.”
Bridges
37
Curt N. Baron
"The secret of happiness is not in doing what
you like, but in liking what you have to do.”
Sir James Barrie
Marianne E. Barry
"My life is like a stroll upon the beach, As near
as the ocean’s edge as I can go.”
H. D. Thoreau
Paula H. Beaulieu
"Don’t let it bring you down.”
James Benevides
Jody Bernardo
"If anyone should ask me to give a reason why I
loved my friend, there could be only one answer:
'Because he was he, because I was I.’ ”
Montaigne
Michelle Berube
38
il‘
- Thomas P. Benibe
\
\
\ Gregory R. Billington
' "There never seems to be enough time to do the
; things you want to, once you find them.”
; Jim Croce
1
I
i
: Elaine Blais
I "Youth is happy because it has the ability to see
! beauty . . . Anyone who keeps the ability to see
i beauty will never grow old.”
i
1 Janis M. Borges
\ "Work away today. Work away tomorrow.
! Never comes the day for my love and me.”
[ Justin Hayword
Loretta Borges
"Don’t walk in front of me I may not follow,
; Don’t walk behind me I may not lead. Just walk
; beside me and be my friend.”
Albert Camus
Arlene B. Botelho
"People cannot and do not want to live unrelated
to other people. We are responsible to and for
one another, and this responsibility is the ulti¬
mate claim imposed on all men alike.”
Thomas A. Harris
39
Katherine G. Botelho
"Time is eternity begun.”
Montgomery
Anne M. Bougie
"Respect is what we owe; Love is what we give.”
P. J. Bailey
Richard C. Boulanger
"And the dove she caresses the morning air, and
the moon holds and kisses the sun. Softly I whis¬
per I love you hon’. It’s wintertime.”
Boulanger
Phyllis A. Bradbury
"Within you there is a stillness and a sanctuary
to which you can retreat at any time, and be your¬
self.”
Patricia Briere
"Where we live or how we live is of little conse¬
quence. What is all-imponant is to live.”
Ernest Dimnet
Louise Brisebois
"Keep your face toward the sunshine and the
shadows will fall behind you.”
Michael Whitnaan
40
A
I
!
; Patricia A. Britland
I "Beauty is not discovered with the eye . . . But
with the soul.”
Catherine M. Brouillard
i "Peace cannot be kept by force, It can only be
, achieved by understanding.”
Einstein
j
i
!
i
i
I Stephen A. Buckley
I
Patricia M. Burke
1 "If I am not for myself; then who will be? And
i if I am only for myself, then who am I?”
! Talmud
Donna Bums
"Nobody ever had a rainbow, baby until he had
the rain.”
Jim Croce
Michael A. Bums
"In quietness and confidence shall be your
strength.”
Old Testament
41
Cathy J. Cabral
"I believe in the sun, even when it is not shining. I
believe in love, even when I am alone. I believe in
God, even when He is silent.”
Paula M. Cabral
Deborah A. Camara
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions,
perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.
Let him step to the music which he hears, however
measured or far away.”
Henry David Thoreau
Victoria M. Canto
"A wise old owl sat on an oak. The more he saw the
less he spoke; TTie less he spoke the more he heard;
Why aren’t we like that wise old bird.^”
Edward H. Richards
David W. Caron
"The future belongs to him who knows how to
wait.”
Cindy Carr
"Don’t let it bring you down.”
Neil Young
42
A
Gary N. Casey
"The greatest people you meet are never really
noticed until they’re gone.”
Denise Chabot
"Be not simply good, be good for something.”
Young
Nat Chamberlain
"I am not in this world to live up to your expecta¬
tions and you are not here to live up to mine. I am I
and you are you, and if by chance we meet, it’s beau¬
tiful.”
Glenn Charos
Nancy B, Chavenson
"The gull sees farthest who flies highest.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Linda L. Chodowski
"Far away there in the sunshine, are my highest
aspirations. I may not reach them, but I can look up
and see their beauty, believe in them, and try to fol¬
low where they lead.”
Louisa May Alcott
43
1
Carol Cleaves
"Light the flame, bright the fire, red is the color
of desire.”
Thomas Clunan
"We lie loudest when we lie to ourselves.”
Eric Hoffer
Theresa M. Coffey
"We want to experience . . . feel, take and give.
We want the same, we’ve but one mind, but we
must wait; our obstacle is time.”
Terri Coffey
Wayne H. Cohen
"Nothing is more highly prized than the value
of each day.”
Goethe
Janis M. Coray
"It’s what you learn after you know it all that
counts.”
Elizabeth A. Cordeiro
". . . Taking a new step, uttering a new word is
what pxrople fear most.”
Feodor Dostoevski
44
Diane M. Costa
"Oh happy race of men, if love, which rules
heaven, rules your minds.”
Jennifer M. Costa
"Let not us look back in anger or ahead with
fear, but around with awareness.”
James Thurber
Kevin J. Cordeiro
Coral Cormier
Jeffrey Correia
""W^en you have nothing to say, say nothing.”
Elizabeth A. Corrigan
"The happiest people seem to be those who have
no particular cause for being happy except that
they are so.”
45
Richard Costa
"Yesterday was the future may be today is.”
Philippe A. Cote
"Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player that
struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then
is heard no more.”
William Shakespeare
Joey M. Courville
"We did not all come over on the same ship, but
we’re all in the same boat now.”
Bernard M. Baruch
Cheryl Cox
"In the mountains of truth, you never climb in
vain.”
Jeffrey W, Cranshaw
"Love is when someone else’s needs become
more important than your own.”
Barbara M. Daley
"Persons are important in that they are all bound
together in a universal relatedness which tran¬
scends their own personal experience.”
Thomas A. Harris
46
I
i «
Brian J, Deamaley
Margaret S. Decosta
Pauline M. Deslauriers
"The only rose without thorns is friendship.”
Suzanne Desmarais
1
(
Deborah A. Desrosiers
"I know myself now, and I feel within me a
peace above all earthly dignities, a still and quiet
conscience.”
Shakespeare
Robert A. Devido
"Folks who never do any more than they get paid
for, never get paid for any more than they do.”
Elebert Hubbard
47
Andrew P. Dickinson .
"There never seems to be enough time to do the
things you really want to do once you find
them.”
Jim Croce
Denis J. Dionne
"Where there is no concern in the heart, there
can be no music in the soul.”
Imhoff
Mildred M. Donahue
"The world is a circle, nobody knows where it
begins and nobody knows where it ends!”
Hal David
Kathy M, Donnelly
Todd S. Dowty
"We live not as we wish to, but as we can.”
Menander
Karen J. Doyle
"To have ideas is to gather flowers, to think, is
to weave them into garlands.”
Mad. Swetchine
48
I
Kevin J. Doyle
Donald W. Dube
Frederick A. Dube
Mary Ann Duffy
"Fields of wonder are the places God goes walk¬
ing; I’ve found them by mistake, and I’ve tres¬
passed.”
Rod McKuen
Carolyn M. Dunne
"Nobody can be exactly like me. Sometimes even
I have trouble doing it.”
Janet L. Durfee
"The smile that you send out returns to you.”
Indian Wisdom
49
William D. Dyson
"The wise man guards against the future as if it
were the present.”
Publisius Syrus
Susan J. Eldon
"It is necessary to the happiness of man that he
be mentally faithful to himself.”
Thomas Paine
Lee Emard
"Nothing great was ever achieved without
enthusiasm.”
Emerson
Karen K. Emmett "
"Although we must move with society, we must
remain our true self.”
Raymond M. England
"All the things I really like to do are immoral,
illegal, or fattening.”
Alexander Wollcoft
Bruce L. Fairhurst
50
Kevin P. Falvey
"Yes, there are two paths you can go by. But in
■ the long run, there’s still time to change the road
■ you’re on.”
! Led 2^pplin
i Frank Farrell
ki
ri
Kim M. Farrell
David M. Ferreira
Gary A. Ferreira
Lynn M. Ferreira
"Man is man and master of his fate.”
Tennyson
51
Denise M. Fischer
"If a man does not keep pace with his compan¬
ions, perhaps it is because he hears a different
drummer. Let him step to the music which he
hears, however measured or far away.”
Thoreau
Paul W. Fontaine
"We have to do something about the way we are
polluting the air, water, and wilderness areas.
Let’s not make God a slumlord.”
Robert Orben
Robert Forrester
Jeffrey R. Fortin
Sandra J. Fountain
"Friendship is a small word, it’s people that
make it big.”
Rachel D. Fournier
"I still believe that people are really good at
heart.”
Anne Frank
52
Cheryl Francoeur
"The best way to secure happiness is to be as
happy as is rightfully possible, today.”
Charles W. Elliot
Rhonda M. Freeman
"No love, no friendship, can ever cross the path
of our destiny without leaving some mark upon
it forever.”
David J. Freitas
"Truly there would be reason to go mad were it
not for music.”
Tchaikovsky
Wayne A. Friedman
"You lose some, you lose some more.”
Lynne M. Furtado
"Man is bom free, and everywhere he is in
chains.”
Jean Jacques Rousseau
Ronald J. Furtado
53
Gerard P. Gaboriau
"An open hand will overcome a closed fist.”
Anne M. Gagne
"Seems the simple things are hardest to explain.”
Dave Mason
Sue M. Galib
"When the going gets tough, the tough get going
and the jellyfish fall by the wayside.”
P. Mercier
Brian W. Gallant
Joseph Gallant
"Yes there are two paths you can go by, but in the
long run, there’s still time to change the road you’re
on.”
L. Zcppelyn
Kathy J. Garvey
"Freedom is just another word for nothing left to
lose.”
Janis Joplin
54
t
Richard Gelles
"I’ll judge you all and make damn sure that no one
judges me.”
Jethro Tull
Robert Gelles
"Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre,
but they are more deadly in the long run.”
’Mark Twain
Patricia Gerber
"How beautiful a day can be when kindness touches
it.”
George Elliston
Carol F. Ginsberg
"Liberty of thought is the life of the soul.”
Voltaire
Gary Ginsberg
"Nothing makes it easier in life to resist temptation
than a proper bringing-up, a sound set of values, and
witnesses.”
Franklin P. Jones
Faye E. Goldsmith
". . . Living is easy with eyes closed. Misunder¬
standing all you see. It’s getting hard to be someone
but it all works out ...”
Beatles
55
Ellen M. Greenberg
"True happiness consists not in the multitude of
friends, but in the worth and choice.”
Ben Jonson
Cynthia M. Griff o
"Respect is what we owe; Love is what we give.”
Philip James Bailey
Donna Guamiere
"You are a child of the Universe, no less than
the trees and the stars, you have a right to be
here.”
Desiderata
Nancy B. Guay
"Since God made us to be originals, why stoop to
be a copy.^”
Billy Graham
Chris J. Hague
Donna Hamel
"Like a bridge over troubled waters, I will lay me
down.”
Paul Simon
56
: iJ
i
Michael Harney
Suzanne L. Harrington
Joyce A. Harrison
"It won’t be long before another day.’’
James Taylor
Eileen A. Hebert
"You give but a little when you give of your pos¬
sessions. It is when you give of yourself that you
truly give.”
Gibran
Raymond R. Heroux
"Ye who could bear ten years your share, of toil
and laughter, Drink Schlitz! for our sail tomor¬
row’s gale. Waves o’er the water.”
Sir Theodore Martin
Alison L. Hill
". . . you have the freedom to be yourself, your
true self, here and now, and nothing can stand in
your way.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
57
Lance E. Hodosh
"Any man may make a mistake; none but a fool
will persist in it.”
Cicero
Richard Hordern
"We’re finally on our own.”
Neil Young
Donna M. Hoseit
"To assert that you know something when you
know it, and to confess that you do not know it,
when you do not — this is true knowledge.”
Confucius
Thomas Hoyle
"It isn’t who I am, but what I am, that will be
my life-long search.”
Julie A. Hussey
"A dream that will need all the love you can give
every day of your life for as long as you live.”
The Sound of Music
Louis N. lannuzzi
"The most important thing in life is to reach out
and touch perfeaion, perfect what you most love
to do.”
;>
il
i:i
I
i
58
I
t
Betty L. Rowitz
"There is only one success — to be able to spend
your life in your own way.”
Christopher Morley
Richard]. Jackson
Andrew C. Jenkins
"Someday after we have mastered the tides and
the waves and the gravity, we will harness for
God the energies of love: and then for the sec¬
ond time in the history of the world men will
have discovered fire.”
Pierre Teillard de Chardin
Lee Ann Jolivet
"Blest in the present, look not forth on ills
beyond, but soothe each bitter with slow, clam
smile.”
Horace
David M. Joncas
"Only put off until tomorrow what you are will¬
ing to die having left undone.”
Pablo Picasso
George Jones
"All you touch, and all you see, is all your life
will ever be.”
Lester Plug
59
f
Sharon E. Kiley
"There never seems to be enough time to do the
things you want to do once you find them.”
Jim Croce
Michael F. Killoran
"Wise men will put their remedies to vices, not
to names.”
Edmund Burke
John B. Kineavy
"You can’t change the past but you can ruin the
present by worrying about the future.”
I
Nancy E. Kozak
"Life is like eating ice cream on a hot day — you
have to work hard at it, or it will melt away and
be wasted.”
Nancy M. Labouliere
"I never think of the future. It comes soon
enough.”
Albert Einstein
Susan Lafleur
"The journey of a thousand miles starts with one
single step.”
Chinese Proverb
60
»
Elizabeth Langfield
"Boredom and fear and anger are the reason that
one’s life is so short, take those from your
thoughts and live a long fine life.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Colette M. Lapointe
"With all its shame, drudgery and broken
dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful.
Strive to be happy.”
Desiderata
Jacqueline Y. Lapointe
"The most important things in life aren’t
things.”
Francis Lavigne
"Everything the eye encompasses is ours. Take
your pick.”
Leo Tolstoy
Jeffrey M. Leach
Cheryl A. Leaver
"Though we travel the world over to find the
beautiful.
We must carry it with us, or we find it not.”
Emerson
61
I
Nancy L. Leaver
"Wc can lift ourselves out of ignorance, we can
find ourselves as creatures of excellence and
intelligence and skill. We can be free, we can
learn to fly.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Margaret M. Lecomte
"When I am all alone, there is no one here
beside me and my problems have all gone, there
is no one to derive me, but you gotta have
friends.”
Margaret Leite
"Thought from the eye closes the understanding,
but thought from the understanding opens the
eye.”
Swedenborg
Patricia A. Lemaire
"I laugh, I talk and when necessary I study.”
Mark A. Lenartoivick
"When you pan from your friend, you grieve
not, for that which you love most in him may be
clearer in his absence, as the mountain to the
climber is clearer from the plain.”
Kahlil Gibran
Lance A. Lescault
"People need me, as much as I need them.”
Phil Bush
62
Nanette Loiselle
"You’ve got so much to say, say what you mean.
Mean what you’re thinking, and think
anything.’’
Cat Stevens
Richard R. Lubold
'Be good (If you can’t be good, be careful.)’’
3 Harrington Tate
[^'V*
fy ■■
j
I Lucille C. Levesque
"It is necessary, while in darlmess to know that
there is a light somewhere. To know that in one-
‘ self, waiting to be found, there is a light.’’
James Bailwin
: Melinda Jane Leyland
"Freedom is just another word for nothing left
to lose.’’
Janis Joplin
I
i Michael E. Leyland
If? "Words are a source of misunderstanding.”
I Saint Exupery
j
i Robert E. Lima
y "If the idea that no solution exists never occurs,
in this lies strength.”
Renan
63
Paula A. Macomber
Micheal Margarletta
Deborah Marshall
"There is no pleasure like the pain of being
loved, and loving.”
W. H. Praed
Alan W. Martel
"Life’s but a means unto an end — that end,
Beginning, mean and end to all things — God.”
P. J. Bailey
Adele M. Massad
Cynthia J. Mattos
"Happiness is not found in self -contemplation;
it is perceived only when it is reflected from
another.”
Samuel Johnson
64
.t
Frank M. Mattos
"I do my thing and you do your thing, I am not
in this world to live up to your expectations, and
you are not in this world to live up to mine. You
are you and I am I, and if by chance we find each
other, it’s beautiful.”
Richard McGee
"Wednesday is Prince Spaghetti day.”
Denise C. Medeiros
"My purpose for living is to find that perfection
and show it forth.”
J. L. S.
Donna M. Medeiros
"To find the beautiful, we must carry it with us
alwavs.”
Gail A. Medeiros
Johm J. Medeiros
65
w
Pamela Medeiros
"People need me as much as I need them.”
Philip Rush
Kenneth S. Mello
"Love is our law. Truth is our worship. Form is our
manifestation. Conscience is our guide. Peace is our
shelter. Nature is our companion. Order is our atti¬
tude. Beauty and perfection is our life.”
Thomas J. Mello
"Life is a quarry out of which we are to mold and
chisel and complete a charaaer.”
Johann Wolfgangnam Goethe
Marc S. Messier
Steve R. Mickool
"Whoever said, 'money couldn’t buy happiness,’
didn’t know where to shop.”
Donna J. Miller
"If only all the hands that reach, could touch ...”
Mary A. Loberg
66
i
I
I
Mary K. Molinski
"I am not afraid of tomorrow for I have seen yester¬
day and I love today.”
William Allen White
David H. Mosher
"All things must pass.”
George Harrison
(
Michael P. Mullaney
". . . And everything under the sun is in tune but
the sun is eclipsed by the moon.”
Susan D. Mullen
"Many people are so afraid to die that they never
begin to live.”
Henry Van Dyke
'
i
Christine A. Murphy
"The problems of the world essentially are the prob¬
lems of individuals. If individuals can change then
the course of the world can change. This is a hope
worth sustaining.”
T. Harris
Kathleen M. Murphy
"There are two ways of
spreading light:
to be the candle
or the mirror that reflects it.”
E. Wharton
67
Ross B, Nerenberg
"Life’s a long song, but the tune ends too soon
for us all.”
Jethro Tull
Steven Nogueira
"A mile walked with a friend has one hundred
steps.”
Russian Proverb
Cheryl A. Nunes
"Love is like a candle; To blow it out would
mean to live in darkness.”
Edmond F. Nunes
Barry P. Obrien
"The truth may hurt, but lies may kill.”
Kathleen A. Obrien
". . . There never seems to be enough time to
do the things you want to do once you find
them.”
Jim Croce
68
r-
I
i ,f
Bradford H. Okeefe
"One of the most important lessons of life is
that success must continually be won and is
never finally achieved.”
Charles Evans Hughes
Doreen M. Oliveira
"Everything has its beauty but not everyone sees
it.”
Confucious
I
I
I
I
i
James W, Oliveira
"The sun is not yellow, it’s chicken.”
Bob Dylan
Jean M. Oliveira
"Sometimes I can laugh and cry and I can’t
remember why. But I still love those good times
gone by. Hold on to them close or let them go.”
James Taylor
Joan E. Oliveira
Paul D. Oliveira
69
Robert A. Oliveira
"It is easy creeping to the top, but once you get
there it’s tough to stay.”
George Allen
Dennis C. Orvis
Randy J. Osga
"God granted me the serenity to make dreams
come through, the mind to dream of great
things, and the knowledge to know the differ¬
ence.”
Keino
Michele A. Ouelette
Rosemary A. Ouelette
"A faithful friend is the medicine of life.”
Appocrypha Ecclesiasticus
Paul S. Palumbo
"I can’t see the future. I hate to think about it.
It’s a drag to think about it.”
Bob Dylan
70
»
Sharon E. Paradis
"Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others
cannot keep it from themselves.”
Jane Addams
Joseph A. Parece
Donald T. Parrott
"He who hath money, thinks he has all.”
Stephen A. Paskowski
"When we cannot find contentment in our¬
selves, it is useless to seek it elsewhere.”
La Rochhefoucould
David Pasternak
"I am willing to taste any drink once.”
James Taylor
Louis T. Pavao
"Try to realize, it’s all within yourself, no one
else can make you change. And to see you’re only
very small, and life goes on within you and with¬
out you.”
George Harrison
71
Robert Redder
"Man is like a letter of the alphabet: to produce a
word it must combine with another.”
Benjamin Mandelslamm
Denise A. Pelletier
"The happiest people seem to be those who have
no particular cause for being happy except that
they are so.”
Dean W. R. Inge
Robin E. Pelletier
"How many i?eople have so much to live for?
How many people indeed, can say to the daylight
that eats up the darkness, I’ve got all I need.”
Rod McKuen
Amy D. Perron
"As we live our lives each day there is a gift that
all of us can give no matter how poor in money
or talent: hold out your hand and let your heart
be in it.”
Kahlil Gibran
Adrien Perry
"Because I do not hope to turn again . . . Desir¬
ing this man’s gift and that man’s scope, 1 no
longer strive to strive toward such things.”
T. S. Eliot
Dewey E. Perry
72
Barbara A. Petrillo
"Toil is the way of life — and its best fruit.”
Hope A. Picard
"Love scarce is love that never knows the sweet¬
ness of forgiving.”
Whittier
David Piche
"For long you live and high you fly, But only if
you ride the tide, and balanced on the biggest
wave. You race toward an early grave.”
Pink Floyd
Debra A. Pickering
"Nobody can give you wiser advice than your¬
self.”
Cicero
Edward E. Pool
Elaine T. Pratt
73
Melanie A. Profio
"With each rising sun, think of our life as just
beginning. Show kindness and love today for
tomorrow’s chance may be lost.”
Gary Puccio
Stephen Quinn
Donna M. Raposa
Cheryl A. Rapoza
"I live for those who love me, for those who
know me true; For the heaven that smiles above
me and awaits my spirit too; For the cause that
lacks assistance, for the wrong that needs resist¬
ance, For the future in the distance, and the good
that I can do.”
G. L. Banks
Debra A. Rapoza
"Silent sunlight, welcome in.
There is work I must now begin.
All my dreams have blown away
And the children wait to play.
They’ll soon remember things to do.
When the hean is young, and the
night is done, and the sky is blue.”
Cat Stevens
74
Scott C. Rawson
David 0. Rebello
i
j
!
]
i
i Marion R. Remj
! "The smile that is worth the praises of earth is
! the one that shines through tears.”
I Cela W. Wilfred
Valerie C. Renaud
"Still I can recall the happy times, laughing arm
! and arm, so alive. Was it years ago, or just a day,
when you turned to me and said goodbye.”
Chicago
V
.1'
r
rtr—
; Michael Rezendis
I "There is an answer to everything if you are fast
\ enough to think of it.”
Edward P. Rita
"You only have one life to live, so live it wild.”
!
!
75
Ann Marie Roberts
Susan E. Rogers
"In a minute there is time for decisions and revi¬
sions that a minute will reverse.”
T. S. Eliot
Robert S. Rosenfeld
"Such is the delight of mental superiority, that
none on whom nature or study have conferred it,
would purchase the gifts of fortune by its loss.”
Samuel Johnson
Charles F. Rowe
"A man who is good for anything ought not to
calculate the chance of living or dying: He ought
only to consider whether in doing anything he is
doing right or wrong.”
Socrates
Nancy J. Rowe
"If I could save time in a bottle, the first thing
I’d like to do, is to save every day ’till eternity
p)asses away; just to spend them with you.”
Jim Croce
Elaine Roy
"I know we’ve come a long way, we’re changing
day to day, but where do the children play.^”
Cat Stevens
76
Timothy Ryan
ivi-
liot
Camille C. Sabra
"There is only one success — to be able to spend
your life in your own way.”
Christopher Morley
JL 1 f
St 1*
r ^ -'i
' •'XIhI
I
(
that !
.» i
’■ ?
.son [
Susan R. Salvas
"Sometimes I laugh and cry, And I can’t remem¬
ber why, But I still love those good times gone
by.”
James Taylor
tto 1 Eliza M. Santos
‘?ht ! "I shall follow the path to wherever my destiny
tfis . and my mission for truth shall take me.”
Kahlil Gibran
ates I ■
1
ling
nity
[OCC
Robert P. Saurette
"How many times must I get up, look out and
see the same old view.”
Cat Stevens
jng Fredrick J. Schofield
i
lens f
1
77
Olaf Schroeder
Carolyn M. Senecal
"Some people’s thoughts are so shallow they don’t
even reach their heads.’’
StanislawJ. Lee
Nancy B. Sevigny
"Love can bring two people to each other, but only
faith can keep them together.”
Louis Biastock
Cathleen A. Shea
"I like the fire, and so I wait for winter nights.
Apples I can take or leave.”
Rod McKuen
Donna J. Sherman
"People who need people are the luckiest people in
the world.”
D. Merrick and J. Styne
Steve M. Shurtleff
78
Shirley Silva
"Give to the world the best you have, and the best
will come back to you.”
Bridges
Diane Silvia
"Hope is a better companion than fear.”
I
David P. Simmons
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions,
perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.
Let him step to the music which he hears, however
measured or far away.”
Henry David Thoreau
Gary D. Simons
"My greatest inspiration is a challenge to attempt
the impossible.”
Albert A. Michelson
Cynthia Slusack
"Time is — Too slow for those who wait.
Too swift for those who fear.
Too long for those who grieve.
Too short for those who rejoice;
But for those who love.
Time is not.”
Henry van Dyke
Beth A. Snyder
"When this you see, remember me and bear in your
mind. Let all the world say what they may. Speak of
me as you find.”
79
Elizabeth A. Soares
"Madness is a joy that only madmen know.”
Drydon
Robert J. Soares
"The only way to have a friend is to be one.”
Emerson
I
Thomas A. Soares
"In vain was I born,
In vain was it written.
While here on Earth,
I suffer.”
Aztec
James J. Sousa
"If you succeed in one thing, strive for more.”
Robert J. Sousa
"To learn to be free and discover is to live.”
Joann Souza
"Lose your dreams and you’ll lose your mind.”
Mick Jagger
SO
I
Joanne M. Souza
Nancy A. Souza
"You have the freedom to be yourself, your true
self, here and now, and nothing can stand in your
way.”
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Richard A. Souza
"Why wait until it’s your time to die before you
learn what you were bom to do?”
Cat Stevens
Ruth A. Stasiowski
"One measure of friendship consists not in the
number of things friends can discuss, but in the
number of things they no longer mention.”
Clifton Fadiman
Robert L. Steme
Gary R. Stone
"Love is a friend, fire, a friend and hell, where
man’s sad repentance dwell.”
81
Russell A. Stowell
"It is our character that gives us a chance to be
more than ordinary.”
Jane E. Sullivan
"That’s the way God planned it.”
Elaine M. Sylvain
"It is better to have one friend of great value
than many friends who are good for nothing.”
Anareharsis
Anne Marie Tavares
"I am not afraid of tomorrow; for I have seen
yesterday and I love today.”
Nancy A. Teas dale
"It is only with the heart that one can see rightly.
What is essential is invisible to the eye.”
Suanne Telles
"You are young, life is long, there is time to kill
a day.”
82
* « * .
1 i
Michael L. Tessier
"To live long is almost everyone’s wish, but to
live well is the ambition of few.”
John Hughes
Steven M. Tessier
"And so you finally ask yourself just how big
you are, and you take your place in a wiser
world.”
Jethro Tull
Darlene M. Therrien
". . . Smiles you’ll give and tears you’ll cry. All
you touch and all you see is all your life will ever
be. . .”
Pink Floyd
Andre R. Thibault
Elaine A. Thibault
"There are two things to aim at in life: first, to
get what you want; and, after that, to enjoy it.
Only the wisest of mankind achieve the second.”
Logan Smith
Fernanda S. Thomas
"Learn as if you were to live forever; Live as if
you were to die tomorrow.”
Glandi
k
83
Barbara A. Thornton
"A smile is something everybody everywhere
does in the same language.”
Stephen Stills
Randy Thurston
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty, that is all ye know
on earth, and all ye need to know.”
Keats
Colleen Toulan
"Tomorrow see the things that never come
today.”
Neil Young
Paul Trudeau
"What is the use of going over the old track
again.^ You must make tracks into the
unknown.”
Henry David Thoreau
Gary A. Turner
"Any plan is bad that is not susceptible to
change.”
Italian Proverb
Jovonna L. VanPelt
"Stand up and gaze on me as friend to friend. I
ask you to reveal the naked beauty of your eyes.”
Sappho
64
David N. Vezina
"The whole end and objea of education is train¬
ing for the right use of leisure.”
Aristotle
Pamela M. Viana
"One may return to the place of his birth, but he
cannot go back to his youth.”
John Barroughs
Patricia A. Viana
"What is a friend.^ I will tell you. It is a person
with whom you dare to be yourself.”
Frank Crane
Kenneth L. Vieira
"Seek and you will find, truth within your
mind.”
J. Tull
David A. Vital
"Make it thy business to know thyself, which is
the most difficult lesson in the world.”
Miguel de Cervantes
Roxanne M. Viveiros
"Within us there is a certain stillness and sanctu¬
ary to which we can retreat, at any time, and be
ourselves.”
Hermenne Hesse
85
Richard B. Wallace
"Freedom means the right to be different; The
right to be oneself.”
Einstein
Michael S. Weiner
"You can’t always get what you want.”
Michael Jagger
Douglas A. Whitney
"There never seems to be enough time to do the
things you want to do once you find them.”
Jim Croce
Jane E. Williamson
"I’ve finally decided my future lies at the end of
the yellow brick road.”
Elton John
Charlotte S. Wnek
"The greatest tragedy of life is not that men per¬
ish; but that they cease to love.”
W. Somerset Maugham
Cheryl A. Wright
"How my life slips away;
How the time goes by, And
1 know I belong here. Yes,
I know, though I don’t know why.”
Carole King
86
Sherman R. Yattaw
Lawrence A. Zusman
"I shall pass through this world but once.
Any gocxi thing that I can do or any kindness
that I can show any human being, let me do it
now and not defer it, for I shall not pass this
way again.”
W. H. Knight
Liz J. Zygiel
"The future is a world limited by our¬
selves; in it we discover only what concerns
us and, sometimes by chance, what interests
those whom we love the most.”
Maurice Maeterlinck
Graduation
Rita Capostagno
"We all live under the same sky but we have dif¬
ferent horizons.”
Konrad Adenauer
Sarah Depuy
"It matters not what are thought to be, but what
you are.”
Publius Syrus
Karen Schmidt
"Life is like a season, let it go its cycle.”
Wayne Thurston
"Life is a pure flame, and we live by an invisible
flame within us.”
Sir Thomas Brown
Jenny Van Pelt
" 'Being myself’ means taking risks with myself,
taking risks on new ways of behavior so I can see
how it is that I want to be.”
Hugh Prather
88
I BELIEVE IN MUSIC
Conductor
By MAC DAVIS
Arranged by JEFFREY SCHLEIFER
March tempo
Upper
Parts
Lower
Parts
Tuba
Guitar
Timpani
Tenor
Tonib
A
4
f
f
-
-
1
J
I9W
At)
Dp'' -d.
A
-t-
Db * Eb
'Music is one of the things, like the ability to laugh, that has kept mankind going for thousands of years.’
Charles Schultz
90
'i^naiucmim
J'^'Wr'MBfff Kict i
93
Men s Chorus
directed by
Mr. Kiah
O’Brien
Madrigal
Singers —
A select
group
of
Vocalists
DISTRICT
The Southeastern District festival, which
was held on January 17 and 18, was hosted
by Somerset High School. The festival
involved 500 students from all over
Southeastern Mass. This district includes
Cape Cod and towns as far north as
Wellesly and Higham. The chorus was
' the largest of the groups with 200
I participating and was represented by Ken
j Brown, Dawn Bolton, Rick Boulanger,
ind David Cucinotta.
The festival provides a chance for the best
musicians in Southeastern Mass, to
perform together and to meet people with
the same interests. It is a great honor for
Somerset High to host this festival and
many long hours of practice and
preparation went into the fine concert
which was held on Saturday afternoon,
January 8.
The orchestra and band, both
involving 1 50 students, were
represented by Liz Cabral, David
Freitas, Cheryl Miranda, David Paine,
Angela Schultz, Valerie Renaud, Philip
Renaud and Janet Wilkins. All
participants were auditioned in late
October at Bourne High School.
Somerset Jazz Band directed by Mr. Robert Perry
Shoiv Group directed by Mr. Kiah O’Brien
Chorus directed by Mr. Bruce Maggs
Symphonic Band directed by Mr. Robert Perry
97
MAJORETTES — 1st row: Linda Chodkowski, Kathy Murphy, Karen Doyle (Head), Denise Pelletier, and Pat Lemaire. 2nd row: Donna Arruda, Pam Higginson, Nancy Sherlog, Judy
Remy (Co-Head), Sharon Hague, Cathy Mello, Paula Medeiros and Sue Martin.
For the first time the majorettes participated in a competition that was held at Silver Lake Regional High School on March 13th. They placed
third after putting on a fine performance. They were also selected as the most spirited group present.
IRLERS 1st row; Ann Arruda, Amy Perron (Head), and Donna Sherman. 2nd row: Karen Kozak, Ellen Greenberg, Marie Auclair, Marianc Prayzner, and Sue Robb.
98
Obbip Sop,,, .nd J.„c Sopa, 2pd Q,h, Po™„. JpdvTybo.
The music department has been extremely active this year. The marching band, led by Mr. Perry as direaor, Mr. St. Laurent as assistant director
and Steve Quinn as president, began the season with a trip to New York, with all members participating in the Columbus Day Parade. TTe organi¬
zation has also been active in local parades and added spirit to football games and rallies.
The Friends of Music, a parent organization, has helped finance many trips and has aided the department in many other ways. Mrs. Mary
Zablocka and Mrs. Charles Chace have coordinated the trips for many years and have done a fine job organizing the many functions the department
has been involved in.
There are many smaller but important groups within the music department. The Brass Choir, Woodwind Choir, String Ensemble, Percussion
Ensemble and the Classical Guitar Quartet, a student lead ensemble directed by Rick Boulanger, gives students valuable experience in small ensem¬
ble playing. The Men’s Chorus, Girls’ Glee, Madrigal Singers, Concert Choir and Chorus are all vital to the department and offer different types of
vocal experiences. All of the vocal organizations are directed by Mr. Bruce Maggs and he is assisted by Paula Macomber, who is the president of
Concert Choir. The Symphonic Band, Orchestra and Concert Band give everyone a chance to be involved in the instrumental program. The Sym¬
phonic Band is comparable to the Concert Choir in that both organizations are made up of a selected group of auditioned students.
A different type of entertainment is provided by AAD Inc., the show group, and the Jazz Band. Both groups performed many times and are in
great demand for many civic functions. The Show Group is led by Kiah O’Brien and president Ric Schofield, while the Jazz Band is directed by
Robert Perry and president Ed Nunes.
Four groups represented S.H.S. on a concert tour to Plattsburgh, N.Y., Montpelier, Vt., and Northfield, Vt. The Symphonic Band, Concert
Choir, Show Group and Jazz Band performed a total of 6 concerts at various schools on this tour in March. A concert was performed at the State
House in Montpelier which brought honor to all groups participating.
All the groups involved in the music department have worked very hard and the department’s successful year testifies to this fact. Many students
participate in the department’s activities and receive great pleasure from them. The music staff has done a fine job this year and special thanks
should be given to Mr. Robert Perry and Mr. Bruce Maggs and all the others who helped make it such a fine year.
99
No man is an island
No man stands alone
Each man’s joy is joy to me
Each man’s grief is my own.
We need one another
So I will defend
Each man as my brother
Each man as my friend.
Joan Whitney
Alex Kramei
ACTIVITIES.
• •
101
"Hey, what the ‘ # @tSi%\
"Best Dressed”
Case Rally 74
"By special request only.”
102
"There’s a new you coming.
'Happiness is . . .Laughing. . .Winning.”
1
Junior Victory, Senior Defeat
"What you see is what you get!”
"What’s the buzz, tell me what’s happening?”
"Seniors make a deal.
103
"Good-by Yellow Brick Road.”
104
You
Recall
"Pussy-footing around?”
105
Student Council — 1974
Senior Class Officers
From left: Boy Gsunsclor Bob Lima, Secretary Karen Doyle, President Janet Durfec, Vice-President Cathy Shea, Girl Counselor Cathy Cabral, and Treasurer Liz Langfield.
Senior Qass Advisor: Mr. Edward Ward.
No man has the right to
leave
The world as he found it.
He must add something
to it.
Either he must make its people
better or happier.
Or he must make the face of
the world more beautiful
and fairer to look at.
Edward Bok
106
Junior Class Officers
Standing: Mr. John Silvia Sr. (Advisor), Treasurer Claire Thibault, President Ellen Slaby, Vice-President Gordon Fitzger-
aid. Kneeling: Girl Counselor Carol George, Secretary Kathy Quinn, Boy Counselor David Gillespie (missing).
Sophomore Class Officers
anding
V.c.P.s;a™. LOH T.,bo., D.vi<i Co™. Bo, Coonsolo, U. Bo,*. Soo.oJ. K..h, Co„.o., Soo M»,„, G,H Couo^io, God, Soil,™
107
Freshman Class Officers
Front: Secretary Nancy Q>sta, Vice-President Laurie Baskin, Girl Counselor Kathy Griffin. Back: Boy Counselor Jeff
Mello, Treasurer Ted Higginson, President Tony Vasconcelles.
Student Advisory Committee
From left: Chris Woods, Kenny Mello, Colette Lapointe, Drew Brodsky, Frank Escobar (missing).
108
Student Council Officers
From left: President Kenny Mcllo, Vice-President Donna Bums, Secretary Lynn Guillette, Missing —
Treasurer Frank Escobar. Advisor Mr. Edward Ward.
109
Breeze
Seated: Dave Correira, Jovanna Van Pelt (editor-in-chief), David Cucinotta (assistant editor), Doug Chapman (assistant editor), Liz Soares (page editor). Standing: Geraldine Bamaby, Mel
Lacerda, Cheryl Potvin, Meg Leite, Sue Rogers, Jackie Lapointe, Larry Zusman, Richard Rogers, Dave Pelletier, Ellen Greenberg, Barbara Bowker, Roxanne Viveiros, Marry Ann Barry, Mr.
Bob Tavaras (advisor).
Chess Club
Left to right Lexue Pavao, Wayne Friedman, Chuanfu Lin, Paul Bergeron, Olaf Schroder, Mike Leylarxl, Lirxia Friedman, Mr Perreita (advisor), Chris Michaud, Lisa Borge (missing),
Frank Sim lair • missing'
Debate Club
■ It
L’ *
Sitting: Geraldine Barnaby, Bill Sharpies, Dave Correia, Frank Escobar. Standing: Barry Weinstein, Merryl Goldberg, Pat Raposa, Mr. Levesque (Advisor), Carla O’Brian, Ann Parent,
Kathy Marciarille, Lisa Borge (Missing).
F.T.A.
F.T.A. Officers from left: Junior Dues Officer Sarah Depuy, Secretary Linda Chodkowski, Parliamentarian Jody Bernardo, Advisor Miss Elizabeth Sousa, President Arlene Botelho, Vice-
President Meg Arruda, Sophomore Dues Officer Sharon Hague, Treasurer Roxanne Viveiros.
Somerset High School
Athletics — 1973, 1974
I
Happy, We celebrate. Gaily. Noisily.
Excitedly. For the year brings with it
many examples of victory. But through
it all runs a ribbon of sturdy silence.
Togetherness cant be explained by
noises or words. IT s best considered in
the quietness of our afterthoughts . . .
113
iJM I ■!>)
1st row: Goach Bob Lane, Jeff Cranshaw, Steve Mickool, Louie lannuzzi, Ed Pool, Gary Puccio (co-capt.), Todd Dowry (co-capt.), Mike Killoran, Chris Hague, Joe Gallant, Gary Angelini,
Brad O’Keefe. 2nd row: Coach Bob Tavares, Bob Kowalski, Bruce Ferreira, Peter Barrar, Steve Cashmon, Gordon Fitzgerald, Barry Costa, Tim Matte, Dave Gillespie, Bob Strohmaier,
Coach Ray McDonald. 3rd row: Mike Marchand, Chris Brady, Jeff Driscoll, Craig Lyne, Dave Correa, Peter McConnell, Kevin Murphy, Tim Shea. 4th row: Coach John Soares, Mike
Mahoney, Joe Haynes, Bill Whalen, Bob Correia, A1 Delorme, Mark Raposa, Steve Cohen, Mark Foster, Coach John Azevedo. 3th row: John David, Kevin Cashmon, Bobby Coombes,
Mike McGee, Gary Berube, Gary Perreira, Marc Carleton, Kenny Viera.
1 U
»
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il
Words of wisdom.
115
Case — Somerset Thanksgiving Football Game 1973
Case 28
Somerset 0
They Came To
Defend The 49’ers
Trophy . . .
%
116
. . . But That
Defense Ended In
Defeat
117
Field Hockey — 1973
Pride best describes this year’s number one Field Hockey Team. For the first time in the
School’s history the team attended Mount Pocono Camp the summer before the season.
This experience and excellent coaching by Sheila P. Fitzgerald brought the team to be the
league champs.
The team, tri-captained by Elizabeth Langfield, Denise Medeiros and Beth Snyder ended their
season with 10 wins, 0 loses and 2 ties.
First row: Loretta Borges, Liz Langfield, Denise Medeiros, Bev Almcdia, Pat Lemaire. Second row: Janet LaFlamc, Kim
Curt, Martha Brough, Debbie Cote, Janine Trudeau, Mary Ann Prayaner. Third row: Monica Berube, Mary Mello, Cheryl
Chodkowski, Pam Lalibertc, Sue Woods, Claire Tbibault. Fourth row: Sue Marcellus, Elaine Leite, Judi Cordeiro, Mary
Ellen Bnxigh, Nancy Hoolc, Sue Cun. Fifth row: Miss Fitzgerald, Gndy Lapointe, Giscle Boulc, Mary Perreira, Pam Tes-
siet
118
r
I'riS
•* ^
»'*■.. *
Str-ctch
A
\
/ »
5
I
t
VICTORY!
121
Paul Bradbur>’
Capcain Randy Osga
122
4s ^
Lean for the wire.
Cross Country — 1973
The Raiders 1973 Cross Country team led by Coach Richard Bernardo experienced a season of
great enthusiasm and moderate success. The season was characterized by luck and ability in the big
meets and hard luck and bizarre events in losing three dual meets. Captain Randy Osga led the
team in achieving second place in the Massachusetts State Division III meet. The other scorers
were Ray Leroux, Paul Bradbury, Paul Petit, and Brian Gallant.
In addition to the 15 male members, this year’s cross country team included 3 women. Cheryl
Cox, Sue Galib and Collette Lapointe, all seniors, were with the team for only one short season. It
is possible though, that they have rewritten the whole history of Somerset Cross Country!
The Line-Up.
123
I
Basketball — 1973, 1974
First row. Cun Baron, John Kincavy, Capnain Greg Billington, Mike Tessier, Ed Ferreira, Don Levesque. Second row: Mike Prystac, Peter Pappas, Paul Killoran, Tim Matte, Kevin Doyle,
Mark Tremblay, Tim Ryan, and Coach Ray McDonald.
124
Tliey’rc off!
125
1
First row: Kevin Murphy, Paul Killoran, Jim Bezner, Don Levesque, Nick Chafin, and Mark Tremblay. Second row: Rick Bence, Peter Pappas, Paul Soares, Mike
Mahoney, Paul Ward, Kevin Cashman, and Mike Prystac.
Laughings
Smiling
feet, feet, feet
thomping
faces swimming
by
a
blur.
127
c
h
e
e
r
I
e
a
d
e
r
s
Kneeling: Meg Arruda, Claire TTiibault, Head — Nancy Kozak, Sue Curt, and Judy Cordeiro. Back row; Sharon Kilcy, Ellen Slaby, Nanette Loi-
sclle, and Denise Fonin.
128
Bottom row: Kim Curt, Eileen Shea, Jennifer Smith, Sue Woods, and Debbie Leonard. Back row: Cheryl Margarida, Elaine Medeiros,
Joanne Paskowski, Ellen Driscoll, Anne Mullens, Kathy Bonas, and Joanne Quental,
129
I
Top row: Cyndcc Lapointe, Liz Langficld, Nancy Hoolc, Cheryl Chodkowsici. Middle
row: Nancy Sousa, Sue Marcellus. Bottom row: Karen Heroux, Coach Fitzgerald, Denise
Medeiros.
130
131
njj » ♦ i
P
Rick Wallace, Chuck Rowe, Ray England
RANDY THURSTON
TODD DOWTY
134
J
Winter Track — 1973, 1974
1st row: Steve Cashmon, Peter Barrar, Tcxid Dowry, Ray England, Gary Ginsberg, Drew Jenkins, Rick Wallace, Chuck Rowe, Brian Gallant. 2nd row:
Steve Mickool, Brad Coates, Mark Weinstein, Kevin Tessier, Kieth Lord, Ray Leroux, Dave Peloquin, Randy Thurston. 3rd row: Jeff Correia, Rick Chase,
Dan Proulx, Tom Hunt, Bob Davidson, Mickey Almeida, Paul Bradbury, Paul Petit. 4th row: Kathy Walley, Gary Angelini, George Gauthier, Jay Pavao,
Mike Almeida, Joe Castro, Ken Vierra, Ted Higginson.
V.
Hockey — 1973, 1974
Coach Souza wishes to thank the six graduating Seniors for their
outstanding pjerformances, leadership, and attitude as members of the Blue
Raider Varsity Hockey Team. Their efforts have established Somerset High
School as a "High Class” Hockey Team which is well-respected whenever it
takes to the ice.
Front row Bob Stifford, Jim Vital. Scott Kcllchcr, Jim McDermon, Bob Scrohnuicr, Rick Lubold, Kevin Williams, Brendan Shea, Scott Levesque, Qaude Tetreault, Dave Vital 2nd Steve
Paskowski Baik row Mark Raposo, Steve Medeiros, Steve Pereira, Don Parks, Ken Viera, Chris Hague, Bob Gardella, Kevin Parks, Paul Laflamme, Rick Horderm, Jack Dator and Coach
Soura
136
Career Records for Seniors
Goals
Assists
Points
Steve Paskowski
32
51
83
Dave Vital
25
41
56
Ken Vieira
34
30
64
Chris Hague
20
36
56
Rick Hordern
4
18
22
Rick Lubold — Goaltcndcr 2.00 avr.
SENIORS: Chris Hague, Steve Paskowski, Rick Hordern, Dave Vital, Ken Vierira, and Rick Lubold.
LEADING SEASON SCORER: Chris Hague.
137
Volleyball
138
Kneeling: Elizabeth Langfield, Sue LaFleur, (Co-Captains) Loretta Borges, Beth Snyder, Sharon Kiley, and Pat Lemaire. Secortd
row: Mary Ellen Brough, Eileen Hebert, Claudia Medieros, Debbie Romagnolo, Cheryl Chodkowski, Maureen Arruda, Janet Laf-
lamme, and Coach Kathleen Goodwin. •
Girl’s Gymnastics
Left to right: Elizabeth DeVido, Cheryl Andrews, Lynn Jenkins, Debbie Cote, Cathy Bonas, Cathy Collins, Pat Russel, Joanne Quentel, and Kathy Cote.
Boy’s Gymnastics
Left to right: Paul Nunes, Jon Morse, Ronald Flenner, Matt Castro, Phil Renaud, Mike Mullen, Bob Redder, Charlie Taveira, and Coach Whitney Horton.
139
I
Springtime Lures
Students Out In Pursuit
Of Their
Individual Whims
I
COACH SULUVAN
140
Baseball — 1974
First row: Bob Souza, Gary Puccio, Ray Romagnolo, Greg Billington, Brad O’KeefcJcff Cranshaw, Mike Bums. John Kineavy. Second row: Charley Taveria, Peter Pappas, Don I^esque,
Dana O’Keefe, Craig Lyne, Tim Matte, Claude Tetreault, Steve Perreira, Bruce Ferreira, Coach Jim Sullivan.
a.
Look straight ahead
To the finish line
Think only of the goal
Run straight
Run high
Run hard
Save nothing
And finish
With an ecstatic burst
That carries yoii
Hurtling
Through the tape
To victory . . .
Frank Home
1
U4
Track — 1974
Gallant, Chuck Rowe, Doug Whitney, (tri-capt.) Randy Osga, (tri-capt.) Randy Thurston (tri-capt.) Andy Dickenson, Drew
Gordon F^Ir^d S *’ Horton, Jeff Correia, A1 Dumont. Bill Dyson. Pete Barrar, Rick Mciee, M.ke Greeley.
Vierra sfew Mu lin? I Cullens, Coach Bob Une, Third row: Mark Porter, Gerry Perre.ra, Steve Cohen. Bob Davidson, Ken^
Coomhfs P ISo^ ’ T r ' Steve Billington, Gary Berube, Paul Soares, John David, T.J. Costa, Bobby
Sbbv^vm Higginson, George Brodeur, Jeff Neville, Chip Collins. Frank Escobar, Jeff Jay, John Parker. Sixth row: Manny Medeiros,
^ 145
1
(§
v^K Vp
?
r
I
I
j
I Tennis
i
Front: Doug Chapman, Ron Pauquettc, Kerry Minor, and A1 Chcbot. Back: Phil Rcnaud, Wayne Cohen, Curt Baron,
Ed Nur.es, and Coach Gary Drewniak.
U8
149
Golf— 1974
Standing: Coach Mr. Paul Corcoran, Jim McDermott, Gerry Gaboriau, Scott Botelho, Bob Redder, Kenny Vieira, Paul Corcoran, Ed Pool. Kneeling: Jeff Oliveira, Mike Corrigan.
150
First row: Elaine Leitc, Pam Tessier, Sue Curt, Loretta Borges, (tri-capt.) Lucille Levesque, (tri-capt.) Cypdee Lapointe, Claudia Medeiros, Cheryl Chodkowski. Second row: Sheree Devoine,
Donna Botelho, Joanne Motta, Claudia Soars, Mary Perreia, Sue Shepp>ard, Janine Trudeau, Shelby Setters, Coach Kathy Goodwin. Missing is Nancy Souza (tri-capt.).
152
153
)
I
I
t
GirVs Track
SOMERSET
ERSET
154
1st row, left to right: Coach Sheila Fitzgerald, Nancy Rowe, Debbie Finucci, co-captains Donna Burns and Sue Galib, Carol Cleves, Cheryl Cox, Maryanne Frazner. 2nd row: Sharon
Ironfield, Sue Marcellus, Eilleen Shea, Jennifer Smith, Sue Woods, Claire Thibeault, Kathy Whalley, Mary Famum. 3rd row: Ellen Driscoll, Cathy Collins, Kim Cun, Debbie Romagnolo,
Colleen Falvey, Kathy Quinn, Pam Higginson, Dale Ready. 4th row: Kathy Cote, Carrie Shepard, Shelly McGrath, Mary Mello, Pat Russell, Diane Hebert, Jessie McCanhy, Nancy Hoole
3th row: Gisele Boule, Lee Ann Orvis, Louise Dunne, Mary Ellen Brough, Martha Brough, Debbie Cote.
155
V Iliuiteu. rviJM^
SHS seniors
J71E.VE. IVllCIWUUL— A line HKAU O’KEEI'E— a SHS
inner for Coach McDonald, athlete v' o<M*n limited
«ve enjoyed his best game action
' the season against Coyle, seaso
oung Mickool runs the end Howe
vdep excellently for the do tt
lue Raiders. fine
RICHARD MCGEE— One KE .
tl)e most deceiving runners size se
oiiensive ana oetensive lines
for fhp, Rliip ^'^iders.
One of
imbers of
ANDY Die.
Killoran, Andy^*.
also out for t
Dickinson’s presen
.A
miss I this lineup will be sor' ^
-• -H GARYPU(y^^5p^
jplaying their loft
mmates gi
1 the Blue Raiders. Besides- listing him at 5’10” and 180 Raiders, who is the biggest ^
‘ing a good runner on of- pounds. Kevin has seen ex- member on the squad bot^^ <b^ .ction by blockto
nse, Richard has played tensive service *' both size and ability. v done by stoppi
•veral outstanding games ^ '€ players with t
r Somerset on defense. , ^ ^ ® V < ^ball carrier
CHRIS HAGUE-A MUO ' A® «' f”!-'
jfensive tailback who has 58* ) jj - uiraA^V. O' .
8V\V
i.O
.Mnetais i-
si* ior
■en considerable action for
imerset this year. Chris has
lied in several times
tuations for the
aiders.
JOE GALLANT ^
iss receiver w^^V ^
ids a way to get ^ ‘
nice Ferreira. Oi. itO-sS ^
lught the ball, JO ^khows ^*^19
iiat to do with it. , losjauiog
PAUL OLIVEIRA^ne of
e strongest members of the
ue Raiders’ defensive unit,
good tackier who likes to hit
id who does so with
no m
otcVi
s\> f
backfii
thee
i‘X ^ A
4 -
^ >ust
^5UIpB^H0^A '
'>?.
iiBqiaijSBq jo jieq aiHis Xee .qi isoi jasjv ^
laniPM ania aiiT ‘iBapp ~ Al® anpiA A, xv^' X oiS> ijV .* ^ ^
H
JO anjjiA A,
sjnoq jasjauii. ^ -l ^ jf
k \0 uos aqj, -ISO, poM V V- f'
^ kVv”® .«!' OjT 0^ c® ife 'V -e bau can
^^'puarSua MSN aq, /5a '/W ■’-P. or '“““e. the I
’ ^'■“'^‘13 S daJd 1 '■ Ox. ' ' \ defensive player I
BID am JOJ paXBjd peq o Js. ' ‘
Auiapeav uojniv pue sjnHd ''
•JS am UI jaiiJBa -UIOOJ ^ €•,
sF
— nO*'^ o
* ^ Y \0^ ’t^uiBqo looqas daJd S
\ \
.a fail
ClIBdpuiJ^
inr
!•»
ithority.
r\
iTuJii
\o
Mther te^^
■ore. ^
Somerset
ough. The
ale the ball t.
' v,i S SHS's Islamite Une
leads jjaiders to win
g\\ 'auM SJOABIU *S> ^
MJ f
.e jaiss
• peq ai^Q
iW’iders' P
times and^® uojSuiine
I id one foul shot, but couldn’t^ uoijBnjis aqj"^^
i )ly a point until the game P"® ^9 2 ubXh J®sj
longed to Reading. They[®I^°^^^P®P“°^^“ni!9
, J cut it down to
th 0:17 remaining, uui • ^
jading made another foul r\V ^ siapuBjg JB joop i|
vTi'’
6 ivc»' ^oy
PouiJojui|'|=
»on of it; (3)
layer can cal
pass; (4)
can punt
^ ** ,^Sng team car
’^ko -I. ’neutral zc
dnb- «J!S *» >-«<=*'
three. 64-6lV^^’ pa^^A^V -JV *^0 ub sb f | ' S’’ a ' : JV;.
lining, but* ,1- aABqpinoqs i-3.| ^ “
nother foul JV KV
recer
I
at
q aABq pinoqs ^ 3- q
ot to insure the victory.
SOMERSET
t Jillington 24, Doyle
d-s=-'
5’-'
!sb-° ;.«<<>
1 #
.4-
0*3
3
as oj
5. s- 2
’ 3 3
03 a>
C-. 8 2
S' ^ \3
2.®e-25
^ ?0 -s ^ to ^
r\? c c s b ^ ^
M a> O .2 « >-
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i>
XO'fft /©*
01
.wV/ A. fcj
3||S' --^tro. ^4^^
0 2 ^ V, « Cardinih. C»
k..>
' r <v<J^ .,>^5
> § 0) .5 =
? ^ -C U CB
J3 —
-c .*2
O C
u —
2il
§ IS
S JQ
0^^ s "c § S
. ii I ? S I 5
■if 511521*?^ ^
I ^ 2
\ <<'.5lliiiJf;£%
led 4^42 e. _
quarter but hau.
four-point deficic^
two minutes to’ _
i Divtok.
Ufti^i itc record ‘an notched its. seventh w
cTc.vl8'-<-k N
_ . ford Yoke trimmed
^ ^ ’ision 1
Jiipped
\4t% itiUbt to H
^ jur unbea
Anthony of New Bedford 44-2
Covh Len Alves had h
< « 3 e «.
if 8 a.'
...ntesl w'ti. the spirits atiacR- rtuu «.
neriod. the penalty
- **as*»-.w. yj coS.
M • iu» udhTurii
-s iigh reached into man advantage situal^pn.
icks and came up
Raiders’
-■•a r-u.
■^ienalty
-
ti1T4
(Class ^aiiuiMct - ^uttf li
WHITE'S restaurant
North WesrpO'*, Mossochoseffs
'6 30 - 9 :00 p rn 1
3Ut«ior ^'fwitir ^ram • -June 7
hearthstone motor inn
Seekonk, Mossochusett?
' 7 30 - ' I 30 p.m. I
(6rni>urtHau - 31 un^ 3
HANSON memorial field
I 4 :00 - 6 00 p rn i
Tu Hi( fnrnt a( rain, rxrrricrs will br
liftll in Ui» S'umrTsrt 'Sigl; Sithaol
31l«m0riol ((i^mnasium.
)58
I
f
159
1
t
i
I
I
I
i
I
I
I
I
-I
I
II
I
I
I
!
I
t '
: I
I
!
r
fe
»
f
i
Faded photograph, covered now with
lines and creases;
Tickets torn in half, memories in
bits and pieces,
Traces of love long ago.
Ribbons from her hair, souvenirs
of days together;
The ring she used to wear, pages
from an old love letter.
Traces of love long ago.
I close my eyes and say a prayer
That in her heart she’ll still find
A trace of love still there
Somewhere . . .
i
160
June 9, 1974
163
- - -
Faces . . . pleasant^
Surprised, posed,
and priceless.
The faces of our friends .
caught in a moment . . .
captured for our memory
Sunglasses and smiles
• •
signs and sounds . . .
faces reflect them all.
The faces tell the story.
The faces record its
chapters.
Everywhere there are
faces . . .
some happy y
some solemn with
thought,
some sad . . .
but always they are
there.
167
Fewer SHSnian I^enections l^riends.
grads n es nightlife
to college Vis% “ /h ‘ "
-6 aro
^.ping cl
Our cl
^ winter snowi
Avenue, lying in
urtyard. and all year <
.re all behind us now, thoi
<a
ei
A CO * e4
Jovonna
ey
^ ill remember them for many ye
Fewer students are proceeding to th o P
lalls of higher learning from Somerse
4>
^ 0) <U Q
^ ^ ^
High School than in previous years, and ° y "
u come. Although the time we sha
, jg in high school is now in the past,
But there is a word, if our : bonds and friendships we have betw«
W«
Guidance Director Edward L. Sullivan . ^ ^ ^ ^
loesn’t think the trend is necessar « c
3ad.
At present, some 61 per cer
ichool’s graduating class is
ittend colleges in the fa*’
;ould jump to 68 pe-
vho is on a wait*
Even so,
Irop fror' ^ ^
-- OJ K
■Si ^ a)
■a a
V? to^te ^constructive and us will last forever.
3, '' worthwhile, that We ^^dies and genUemen,
Sc from our goal RESPONSIBIL. • members of this class are adults,
have free speech, free press, t e gi serious responsibility has fallen on
O assembly, and the freedom to choo^ today. We are on our own, and today
» way in which we exercise the^- * feel a very real test and responsibil
IP choose the wrong way* to ourselves, to our families, and
-pcard responsibility in ® each other. We must use the educat
iflpa of totally unlimit obtained at Somerset *’
have the obligation to take benefit society fc
■|
freedom, we
the
gone too far.
Freedom led to
-n-quences^Some have
perhaps unjust, yet
The events th"
our V
V
.>\ vcy^\same mistal^
-dS''
.a&s
,0^
9^e'. B°'“
; VICTORIOUS
i Goodbye to oil that
Our sincere thanks to the following people who helped in
making the ’74 Raider possible . . .
169
I as UG ocl for strengtk, tkat I miglit
acnieve.
I was made weak, tkat I mi gkl earn
kumkly to okey . . .
I asked for kcaltk, tkat I mig ktcio
greater tkings . . .
I was given infirmity, tkat I mi gkc! o
Letter tkings . . .
I aK]:ed for rickes, tkat I migkt Le kappy,
I was given p)Overty tkat I mi gkt Le
wise . . .
I asked for power, tkat I migkt kave tke
praise of men,
I w’as j^iven weakness, tkat I mi<2kt feel
tke need of God . . .
I aske df or all tkings, tkat I migkt enjoy
life,
1 w'as given life, tkat I mig kt enjoy all
tkinr^s . . .
1 got notking tkat I as U for - Lut
everytking I kad koped for.
Almost despite myself, my unspoken
prayers were answered.
1 am among all men, most rickly Llessed.
TaWpfcon* 673-3241
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1974
COMPLIMENTS OF
COASTLINE TO WING CORE.
1 Shaw Street,
Fall River, Mass.
674-3531
“Join the Navy"
provides one of the
best opportunities
available.
A lot of the important things young people need
today they can find in the Navy. A sense of
purpose and dedication. Scholarships to help
them through college. And an opportunity to get
specialized schooling and on-the-job training
and experience in a broad range of Navy occu¬
pations. Occupations that could pay off hand¬
somely in civilian life. Joining the Navy gives
young men and women a chance to discover the
world. And to discover themselves. So, if you
know any young people who qualify, why not
suggest a visit to the local Navy recruiter. He’s
prepared to discuss the opportunities available
in today’s Navy.
U.S. NAVY
RECR UITING BRANCH
STATION
281 SOUTH MAIN STREET
FALL RIVER, MASS. 02721
674-2312
LeCOMTES DAIR Y, INC
500 WOOD STREET
SOMERSET, MASS. 02726
VENUS DE MILO
75G.A.R. HIGHWAY
SWANSEA, MASS. 02777
678-3901
BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS
OF 1974
SLADES EERR Y TR UST CO.
SOMERSET, MASS.
.
MULLEN BR 0 THER ’S
JEWELERS
WILLIAM HORNER
MILLWORK CORP.
254 SOUTH MAIN STREET
1215 G.A.R. HIGHWAY
FALL RIVER, MASS.
SOMERSET, MASS.
TERMINAL BAKER Y
DALEY OIL COMPANY
547 SOUTH MAIN STREET
DALEY ’S TIRE CENTER
FALL RIVER, MASS.
672-0471
PAUL J. DALEY CLASS OF ’45
CONOR A TULA TIONS
CLASS OF 74
GUSTAVE MATTOS
PARISIAN DRESS
ELECTRICAL CO., INC
SHOPPE
40 QUARRY STREET
FALL RIVER, MASS.
228 SOUTH MAIN STREET
675-7123
FALL RIVER, MASS.
Tune me into the wild side of life,
I’m an innocent young child sharp as a knife,
Take me to the garretts where the artists have died.
Show me the court rooms where the judges have lied.
Let me drink deeply from the water and the wine,
BEST WISHES
FOR
Light coloured candles in dark dreary mines,
Look in the mirror and stare at myself,
And wonder if that’s really me on the shelf.
SUCCESS
DON ’S MARINA
Take me down alleys where the murders are done,
In a vast high powered rocket to the core of the sun.
Want to read books in the studys of men,
Born on the breeze and die on the wind.
3797 RIVERSIDE AVENUE
If I were an artist who paints with his eyes,
I’d study my subject and silently cry.
Cry for the darkness to come down on me.
For confusion to carry on turning the wheel.
SOMERSET, MASS.
And each day I learn just a little bit more,
I don’t know why but J do know what for.
If we’re all going somewhere let’s get there soon,
This song’s got no title just words and a tune.
— Elton John
175
1
SOMERSET CREDIT UNION
740 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
RUDY’S GETTY
1258 Wilbur Ave.
Somerset, Mass.
672- 9552
SPECTATOR PRESS
780 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
674-4656
INDIAN SPRING PHARMACY
3041 County Street
Somerset, Mass. 02726
678-2929
KINNEY SHOE STORE
300 G. A. R. Highway
Somerset, Mass.
CENTRE PHARMACY
1186 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
SOMERSET NURSERY
3256 County Street
Somerset, Mass. 02726
673- 3371
LOUISE’S, INC.
298 South Main Street
Fall River, Mass.
673- 2641
VERA’S FASHIONS
865 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
FRIENDLY ICE CREAM SHOP
942 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
674- 8080
DURFEE BUFFINTON INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
377 Second Street
Fall River, Mass.
675- 7481 679-6486
THE PIZZA CHEF
1224 Wilbur Ave.
Somerset, Mass.
At Brayton Pt. Rd.
HOLIDAY LANES
231 Riverside Ave.
Somerset, Mass.
G. R. LEVESQUE CONSTRUCTION
17 Hemlock Street
Somerset, Mass.
POIRIER’S AUTO SCHOOL, INC.
579 Division Street
Fall River, Mass.
674-1935
Compliments of
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
OF FALL RIVER
SAWYER’S CAMPUS SHOP
149 South Main Street
Fall River, Mass.
GOB SHOPS — WESTERN AUTO
G.A.R. Highway
Somerset, Mass.
FIRST BRISTOL COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
Harbour Mall
Fall River, Mass.
679-8586
ROBERT’S HOUSE OF FORMALS
17 Rodman St. — Next to Bus Terminal
Fall River, Mass.
672-0009
CINDY’S GIFT SHOP
G.A.R. Highway
Somerset, Mass.
MR. CARL’S BARBER SALON AND MEN’S STORE
1176 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO.
Slade’s Ferry Ave.
Somerset, Mass.
CHINA VILLAGE
1 142 County Street
Somerset, Mass.
PROVIDENCE TOOL CO., INC.
129 Liberty Street
Central Falls, R.l.
176
J
The 1974 RAIDER represents the efforts of the entire staff to create a book
with which the class of 1974 can identify. We have experienced a great deal of
joy and frustration in its creation, but we feel it has been well worth the effort.
A special thank you goes to our advisor, Mr. Richard LaMothe, who gave so
generously of his time and without his advice and co-operation this book
would not have been possible.
We would like to extend our appreciation to Mr. Arnold Lohmann of Tay¬
lor Publishing Co. for his help in compiling the contents of the 1974
RAIDER.
We wish to thank Mr. Joseph Geoffroys of Brown Studios, who photo¬
graphed many events which appear throughout the book. A thank you to Mr.
Kenneth Day who also aided us with his photography.
We hope the book will be a source of enjoyment to all who remember the
class of 1974.
Jody and Kathy
Raider Creators
From left to right: VaJ Renaud (music editor), Cindy Slusack (aaivities editor), Andrew Jenkins (sports editor), Colette LaPointe (spxsrts editor), Susan Galib (photography), Jeannie
Oliveira (typist), Chris Murphy (faculty editor), Kathy Murphy (co-editor), Mr. Richard LaMothe (advisor), Jody Bernardo (co-editor), Linda Chodkowski (ads), Alan Martel (ads), Janice
Corey (ads), Ruth Stasiowski (ads), Donna Guarniere (ads). Missing: Cathy Cabral (senior editor), Lance Hodash (ads), Meg Arruda (photography).
179
Senior Directory
— A— ■
ABALLO. BRAIN
719 Read St.
Marching Band 1. 2, 3, 4; Wind Ensemble 1, 2; Orchestra I, 2, 3, 4; Osc
Rally 2, 3, 4, Projectionist I, 2, 3. 4; Concen Barkl 3. 4; String Ensemble 4;
Symphonic 3. 4. Dr. Ed. 3.
AINSWORTH. CURT
106 Norman Avc.
Co-op
ALBANY. ROBERT
64 Deer St.
Case Rally 1. Astronomy 2.
ALMEIDA. BEVERLY;.
131 Pleasantview Ave
Library Aide 1, 2, 3. 4; Field Hockey 2. 3, 4; Case Rally 2. 3; Softball 3. 4.
AMARAL. ALAN
44 Gibs St.
AMARAL. VALERIE
9 Butternut Avc.
Concert Choir I, 2. 3, 4; Chorus 2, 3, 4; AAD 2; Marching Band 2, 3. 4;
Concert Band 3. 4; Orchestra 4, Madrigal 4.
ARRUDA. ANNE MARIE
9 Kanas Ave.
Breeie Staff I, 2; Case Rally 1, 2, 3. 4; Prom Committee 3; Dr. Ed. 3; March¬
ing Band 4. Flagrwirlen 4
ANGEUNI.GARY
43 Beverly St
Chess Club 1 ; Winter Track 3, 4, Dr. Ed. 3.*
ARRUDA. DALE
301 High Sc.
Case Rllly 1, 2, 5. Library Aide 1 ; Girls Glee 1; Nurses Aide 2, 3, 4; Concert
Choir 2, 3.
ARRUDA. MARGARET
Fordham Dr
j|uymnasiKs 1; Intramurals 1; FTA 4; Student Council I, 4; Pep Squad 3;
Prom Committee 5; Cheerleader 4 . Marching Band 4.
AUGER. WILLIAM
128 Bargo Rd.
Dr Ed. 2, Boy Councilor 3.
— B —
BARLOW. DONNA L
293 Clearview Rd
Dr Ed. 3.
BARON, CURT
244 Pratt Ave
Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Tennis 2, 3, 4; Case Rally 2. 3, 4; Leaders Club 3,4
BARRY, MARIANNE
223 Chateau Dr.
Brecae 2, 3; Chorus 2, 4. FTA 4, Case Rally 3, 4; Prom Committee 3.
BEAULIEU. PAULA
275 Regan Rd.
Student Council 2; Dr Ed. 3
BENEVIDES.JAMES
6 1 Cheery Sc.
Gym^stics 1.
BERNARDO.JODY
93 Chiieiu Dr * v •
Library Akk 1. 2, 3. 4; Case Rally I. 2. 3. 4; National Honor Society 3, 4,
S A C 3. Student CoufKil 4; FTA (pariiamencarian) 3, 4, Yearbook Editor 4.
BERUBE. MICHELLE
194 Mass Avc
BERUBE. THOMAS
98 Berube Ave
BILUNGTON. GREGORY
217 Pratt Ave.
Basketball I, 2. 3. 4, Baseball I, 2, 3, 4. Football 1; Intramurals 2, 3, 4,
National Honor Society 3, 4
BLAIS. EUINE
139 Delaware Avc
Drama 1, 2, 4. Case Rally 4
BORGES. JANIS
728 Htghview Ave
BOTELHO. ARLENE B
5'’2 Regan Rd
Eaplotm 1 , 2 . FT A 2, 3 . Case Rally 2, 3 . National Honor Society 3. 4
BOTHELHO. (CATHERINE
993 Riverside Ave
Conten Choir I, 2. Girls Glee 1, 2. Concen Band I, 2. .3, 4, FTA 2, Case
Rally 2. Marxhing Band I, 2. 5, 4, SymphonK Band 3. Libranan 4.
BCXUIF. ANNE
.’yrna* Ase
Fj ; . Ski Liub 2. Case Rails a - —
Bt M I^NGFR RICAHRD -
Derr Sf '
Vsn h, Bind . 3 Wind Ensemble 1. 2. Orchestra I, 2, 4, Brass Choir
1. 2; Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Folk Group 1; Jazz Band 1. 2, 4; Madrigal 1. 2, 3;
Concen Choir 2. 3. 4; Men's Chorus 2, 3. 4; Case Rally 2; S.D.C 2. 3; Sym¬
phonic Band 4; Concen Band 4; Guitar Ensemble.
BRADBURY, PHYLUS ANN
2315 Riverside Ave.
Case Rally I. 2, 3. 4. Marching Band 4; Colorguard 4; Student Council 4.
BRAGA. DEBRA
234 Tremont Sc.
Case Rally 2, 3; Office Aide 2, 3. 4.
BRIERE. PATRICIA
33 Evans St.
Case Rally 2.
BRISEBOIS. LOUISE
30 Gray St.
Concert Choir 3,4; Chorus 3.4; Girls Glee 4; Dr. Ed. 3.
BRITLAND, PATRICIA A.
33 Forsyth Avc.
Case Rally 2; FTA 4; Dr. Ed. 4.
BROULLARD. CATHERINE M.
1 70 Pocasset St.
Marching Band 1, 2, 3. 4; Symphonic Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra I; Chorus 2;
Case Rally 2; Concert Band 2, 3; Dr. Ed 3; FTA 4.
BUCKLEY, STEPHEN A.
390 Old Colony Avc.
Football 1.2; Case Rally 2; Drama 2. 3, 4.
BURKE, PATRICIA M.
39 Antrim St.
Dr Ed. 2; Chorus 2. 3; Office Worker 3.
BURNS. DONNA L.
23 New Jersey Avc.
Concert Choir 1; Case Rally 1, 2. 3; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Girls Track 3, 4; Art
Gub 3; Student Council 1, Vice-President 4.
BURNS. MICHAEL A.
198 Washington St.
Baseball 1. 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Football 1, 2, Intramurals 3. 4; Ski
Club 4; Case Rally 3, 4; National Honor Society 3, 4.
— C—
CABRAL, CATHYJ
^86 Elm St.
('ase Rally I, 2, 3. 4, Office Helper 1; FTA 2; Dr. Ed. 3; Student Council 3,
4. Girl Councilor 3. 4. Prom Committee 3; Yearbook 4
CABRAL. PAULA M.
90 Leahy Ave.
CAMARA, DEBORAH ANN
1 3 Oregon St.
Library Aide 1 ; Case Rally I, 2, 3, 4, pA'ology Oub 1; Intramurals 1; Chorus
2. 3; Marching Band 2, 3, 4, Colorguard 2, 3, 4; Concert Choir 2; Dr. Ed. 3;
Prom Committee 3, Bieezc 3; FTA 3; Drama 3,4, Art Club 3,4; Gunner 4
CANTO, VICTORIA
413 Almy Rd
Marching Band 1, 2; Concert Band 2, 3, 4; Library Aide 3, 4; Dr. Ed. 3; Case
Rally 4.
CARON. DAVID W
29 Senic Dr.
Explorers 2, 3. 4; Chess Club 1; Intramurals I, Case Rally I. 2. 3; Ski Club 2.
3,4.
CARR. CYNTHIA J
189 Denham St.
CASEY. GARY
203 Palmer St.
CHABOT, DENISE L
212 Gifford St.
Marching Band 2, 3; Case Rally 1. 2, 3, Ski Club 2, 3.4.
CHAMBERLAIN. NATHANIEL B.
106 Wcsthill Avc.
Football 1 . Ski Club 2. 3, 4, Breeze 2, 3; Photography I, 2, 3, 4.
CHARC3S.GLEN
67 Sumnnerficid Ave
Fcxxball 1 ; Track 2, 3; Projcttionlst 1. Explorers Club 2; Dr Ed. 3-
CHAVENSON, NANCY B
126 Rustic Rd
Student Council 1, 2. 3, Gymnastics I , Case Rally I, 2, 3, Pep Squad 2, FTA
2; Ski Oub 2, 3, 4; Dr Ed 3. Drama Workshop 3, 4, Thanksgiving Day
Breakfast 4, Yearbtx>k 4
CHODKOWSKI.UNDA L
46 Doherty Ave
Library Aide I; Case Rally 1, 2, 5, 4. FTA I, 2, 3, 4. Photography 2. March¬
ing Ba/>d L 4 . MaK)rencs 3, 4 . Prom Committee 3-
CLEAVES. CAROL FRANCIS
2816 Riverside Ave
Gymnastics 1. 2. Osc Rally 1. 2. 5, 4, Intramurals 2. 5, 4, Girls Softball 2;
Paom Commictee 3
CLUNAN. THOMAS JR
^1? Chatrerfnn Ave
Case Rally 4
COFFEY. THERESA M
60 Kaufman Rd.
Library Aide 1; Colorguard 2. 3; Art Club 3. 4; Case Rally 3, 4; National
HoncM- ScKicty 3, 4.
COHEN. WAYNE
8 Lourdes Rd
Tennis 5. 4; Case Rally 4.
CORAY.JANIS
86 Forsyth Ave.
Chorus 1. 2; bbrary Aide 2, 3, FTA 4; Yearbook 4.
CORDEIRO. ELIZABETH ANN
483 Lafayette St.
Case Rally 3; Dr. Ed. 3.
CORDEIRO. KEVIN
1 13 Patterson Ave.
Baseball 1.3,4, Weightlifting 4.
COMIER. CORAL
3! Folsom Ave.
CORREIA, JEFF
127ChaceSt.
Intramurals 1, 2; Winter and Spring Track 3, 4.
CORRIGAN, ELIZABETH
93 ('aptains Way
FTA 2; Case Rally 2. 3. 4, Prom Committee 3.
COSTA. DIANE
286 Mass. Ave.
Girls Glee 1 ; Concert Choir 1; Prom Committee 3; Case Rally 3
COSTA. JENNIFER
10 Homestead Ave.
COSTA. RICHARD
389 Lafayette St.
Student Council 1, 2, 3; Co-Op 3,4.
COTE. PHILLIPPE
30 Bower St.
Astronomy 3; Art Club 3, 4; Dr. Ed. 3; Case Rally 3; Prom Committee 3-
COURV1LLE.JOEY
608 Eastview Ave.
COX. CHERYL
39 Jackson Ave.
Mixed Chorus 1; Case Rally 1, 2, 3, 4; Girls Track 2, 4; Leaders Club 3, 4;
Dr Ed. 3, Drama 3; Winter Track 4, Cross Country 4; FTA 4.
CRANSHAW.JEFFREY
21 Buxton Ave.
Football !; Baseball 1, 2. 3, 4; Chess Club 1; Weightlifting 1, 2. 5, 4, Intra-
murals 1, 2, 3, 4; Hockey 3.
CRONAN. TIMOTHY
4003 Riverside Ave.
Gymnastics 1, 2, 3.
— D —
DALEY. BARBARA
27 Briar Rd.
Explores Club 2, 3; FTA 2, 3, 4, Case Rally 2. 3; National Honor Society 2,
DEARNALEY, BRIAN
2220 Riverside Ave.
Baseball 1. 2.
DECOSTA. MARGARET
373 Main St.
Case Rally 3
DESLAURIERS, PAULINE
233 Highview Ave.
Student Council 3; Case Rally 3, 4.
DESMARAIS. SUZANNE
3 Spruce St.
Library Aide I, 2. 3, 4, FTA 4, (jse Rally 2, 3.
DESROSIERS. DEBORAH A
104 Rice Ave
DEVIDO, Ri>BERT
262 Conn Avc
Protectionist 1, 2. 3. 4, Case Rally 2. 4, Drama 3, Dr Ed. 3
DIONNE. DENIS
380 Kaufman Rd.
Case Rally 2. 3. Dr Ed. 3
DONAHUE. MILLY
110 Palmer Sc.
Library Aide 1, Ose Rally 1. 2. 5, Df Ed 4
DONNELLY. KATHLEEN
343 Bourn Ave
Photography 1, 4, Ski Qub 2. 3. 4
DOWTY. TODD
77 Ash Sc
Fcxxball I. 2. 3, 4. Spring Track 3, 4. Winter Track 4
DOYLE, KAREN
206 Lcpcs Rd
Chorus I. 2. 5, 4. Marching Band 1, 2; 3, 4, Class Secretary I, 2, 3, 4. An
Gub 3 . Maforettes 2. 3. 4
DOYLE. KEVIN
4
180
206 tcpes Rd.
Football I . Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Track 2.
DUBE. D(3NALD
3793 Rivcrsitlc Avc.
Marching Band 1, 2 ; Ski Club 3, 4.
DUBE. FRED
63 Doolittle Ct.
Director, of Language Lab 1,2; Track Assistant 3.
DUFFY. MARYANN
171 Thelma Ave.
Concert Choir I; Environmental Club I, Case Rally 1. 2, 3; Prom Commit¬
tee 3.
DUNNE. CAROLYN
723 Mohawk Rd.
FTA 2. 3; Dr. Ed 3; ^i Club 4; Student Council 4.
DICKENS(3N. ANDY
13 Pleasant St,
Track 2, 3, 4; Football 1. 4; Gymnastics 1.
DYSON. WILLIAM
128 Hemlock St.
Track 4; Football 1; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4.
DURFEE.JANET
2136 Riverside Ave.
Dr Fxl 3; Class President 4; Ski Club 4.
— E —
ELDON, SUE
210 Harrison Ave
Library Aide 2; Marching Band 2, 3, 4; Chorus 2, 3; Dr. Ed. 3-
EMARD. LEE
73 Doolittle Ct.
Football 1 ; Winter and Spring Track I, 2, 5, 4.
EMERY. DAVID
95 Foresdale^r.
National Honor Society 3, 4.
EMMETT. KAREN
121 Watuppa Ave.
Photography 2; Dr Ed. 3; Ski Club 3. 4, Art Club 3, 4.
ENGLAND. RAY
163 Butternut Rd
Track 1. 2. 3, 4; Cross Country 1, 2; Intramurals 1. 2. 3; Dr. Ed. 3.
— F—
FAIRHURST. BRUCE
2612 Riverside Avc.
Co-op 3, 4; Student Council 3.
FALVEY, KEVIN
134 Wookland Park
President 1; Football 1, 2, 4; Chess Club I ; Case Rally 1.2; Intramurals I, 2.
FERREIRA. DAVID
5423 Riverside Avc.
Dr Ed,4.-
FERREIRA.LYNN
29‘’4 Riverside Ave
FERREIRA. GARY A.
42 Valley Rd
RSCHER. DENISE
146 Harrison Ave.
Chorus I, 2; ETA 2; Symphonic Band 2, 3, 4; Concert Band 3, 4; Orchestra
3, 4 . National Honor Society 3. 4; Colorguard 4.
FLANAGAN. MARGARET
193 I-on^ill Ave.
FONTAINE, PAUL
173 Folsom Ave.
Astronomy Club 3, 2.
FORTIN.JEFFREY
120 Kaufman Rd.
Co op 4
FOUNTAIN, SANDRA
36 School St.
Dr Ed, 3. Case Rally 4.
FOURNIER. RACHEL
28 Roland Ave
Case Rally 1. 2. 3, 4. Concen Choir 3; Girls Glee 3; Chorus 3; Prom Com¬
mittee 3, Marching Band 4; Ski Club 4.
FRANCOEUR. CHERYL A
29 Butkner Dr.
FREEMAN. RHONDA
79 Sullivan Ave.
Mixed (^hoir I ; Girls Glee 1, 2; Case Rally 3; Prom Committee 3-
FREITAS. DAVIDJ.
60 Second St.
Marching Band I, 2, 4, Symphonic 1, 2, 3; Concen Band 1. 2, 3, 4. Jazz Band
1. 2. 3, 4; Pep Band 1. 2; Brass Choir 1. 2. 3. 4, Intramurals 1. 2; Orchestra I,
2, 3.4, String Ensemble 4, Southeastern District Orchestra 4.
FRIEDMAN. WAYNE A
176 Woodland Dr
Boy Councilor 1; Chess Club 1, 2. 3, 4, Intramurals 1, 2, 3, Football 1;
Debate 1 .
— G —
CiABORIAU. GERARD F
733 Brayton Ave.
Golf Team I, 2, 3, 4.
GAGNE. ANNE MARIE
63 Euclid Avc,
GALIB. SUEM
71 Apostle Rd.
Ski Club 2, 3, 4; Student Council 3, 4; Girls Track 3; Winter Track 4; Cross
Country 4; National Honor Society 4; Yearbook 4.
GALLANT. JOESPH N.
81 Birch St.
Football 1.2. 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2. 3, 4; Explorers Club 2, 3, 4; Case Rally 3,
4; Dr. Ed. 3.
GARVEY, KATHRYN
218 Grandview Avc.
StudcntCouncil I; Dr. Ed. 2.
GELLES, RICHARD
212 Delaware Ave.
Intramurals 1, 2, 3. 4; Explorers 2. 3, 4; Case Rally 2; Tennis 3, 4; Dr. Ed.
GELLES, ROBERT
212 Delaware Ave.
Intramurals 1. 2. 3, 4; Explorers 2. 3, 4; Case Rally 2; Tennis 3,4; Dr. Ed. 3.
GINSBERG. CAROL G.
143 Feno Ct.
Art Club 3, 4; Case Rally 3; Breeze 4; National Honor Society 4; Ecology 4.
GINSBERG. GARY K.
30 Allardicc Rd.
Intramurals I, 2, 4; Winter and Spring Track I, 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 2, 3.
4;Dr. Ed. 3.
GOLDSMITH. FAYE
113 Highview Avc.
Case Rally 1.
GREENBERG. ELLEN MARCY
23 Vermont Ave.
Chorus 1, 2. 3. 4; Folk Group 1; Concen Choir 2. 3, 4; Marching Band 1, 2,
3, 4; Madrigal 2, 3, 4; Girls Glee 2, 3, 4; AAD Inc. 2, 3, 4; District Chorus 2;
National Honor Society 3, 4; Flagrwirlcrs 4; Breeze 4; Drama 4; Math Club
4.
GRIFFO. CYNTHIA M.
212 Almy Rd.
Library Aide 1, 2; Case Rally 2; Girls Track 4; Dr. Ed, 4.
GUARNIERE. DONNA LEE
108 Briggs Avc.
Case Rally I, 2, 3; Chorus 1; Explorers 2, 3; National Honor Society 3, 4;
Yearbook 4.
GUAY. NANCY
195 Gifford Avc.
Case Rally 1. 2, 3; Ski Club.
GULLEMETTE, MARK
317 Wood St.
Track 1, 2; Winter Track 1, 2, 3; Weightlifting I, 2, 3.
— H—
HAGUE. CHRISTOPHER;.
80 Linden Dr.
Football 1,2, 3. 4; Basketball 1; Track 2, 3, 4; Hockey 3, 4.
HAMEL, DONNA
288 Easn.'icw Ave.
Dr Ed. 3.
HARNEY. MICHAEL
97 Scaver Ave.
HARRISONJOYCE
943 Brayton Pi. Rd.
Student Council 1; Case Rally 1.2, 3; FTA 3, 4; Explorers Club 3; Ycarbiwk
4.
HEBERT. EILLEEN
133 Harrison Ave.
Gymnastics 1, 2, 3, 4; FTA 3; Library Aide 1 ; Case Rally 3, Dr. Ed. 3; Track
3; Volleyball 4; Softball 4.
HEROUX, RAYMOND
814 County St.
Basketball I, 2; Case Rally 1. 2. 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, Gymnastics 3-
HILL. ALISON
228 Eastview Avc.
Chorus I, 2. 3. 4; Concert Choir 1, 3, 4; Case Rally 1. 3. Marching Band 2, 3;
Girls Glee 2; Colorguard 2. 3; Drama 4; FTA 4.
HODASH, Ij\NCE
301 Harbor View Blvd.
Marching Band I, 2, 3, 4, Wind Ensemble 2; Jazz Band Manager 2, .3. 4;
Concert Band .3. 4 . Yearbook 4 ; Symphonic Band 3. 4.
HORDERN. RICHARD
41 Pleasant Sr.
Football 1 , Case Rally T. intramurals 2. 3; Hockey 3, 4.
HOSEIT. DONNA
378 Palmer St
HOYLE. THOMAS
1993 Riverside Ave.
HUSSEY. JULIE
338 Harbor View Blvd.
Intramurals I. 2, 3; licology l;Dr Ed. 3.
lANNUZZI. LOUIS
240 Highview Ave.
Foothill 1, 3. Intramurals 1, 2. 3. 4. Osc Rally 2. 3; Track Team 4
ILLOWITZ, BETT3-
169 Vermont Ave.
Case Rally 2. 5: Astronomy 2; FTA 3.4. Yearbook 4; Bte«e 4; Drama 4
JACK.SON. RICHARD
93 Woodland Dr
JENKINS. ANDREW
204 Conn. Ave.
Cross c:ountry 2; Winter Track 2; Track 3. 4; Explorers 3, 4; Case Rally 2;
Explorers Club Treasurer 3; National Honor Society 3, 4 Yearbook 4
JOLIVET, LEA ANN
270 Read .St.
Case Rally 3; Prom Committee 3; Tlianks^iving Day Breakfast 4
JONCAS, DAVID
12 Fair Dr.
JONES. GEORGE
720 Regan Rd.
Basketball I; Intramurals I, 2. 3, 4; Case Rally 1.4; Dr, Ed. 3.
— K—
KILEY. SHARON
312 Mass. Avc.
Concert Choir 1; Girls Glee G Case Rally 1,2. 3. 4; Pep Squad 3; Volleyball
3. 4, Softball 3, Cheerleader 4; Marching Band 4.
KILLORAN, MICHAEL
90 Captains Way
Football 1. 2. 3. 4. Intramurals 1. 2. 3, 4; Track 2; Ski Club 2, 3, 4; National
Honor .Society 3.4; Boys’Stacc Representative 3;Casc Rally 1, 4.
KINEAVV.JOHN
76 Perron Ave.
Basketball 1. 2. 5, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Projectionist 1; Intramurals 1; Dr.
Ed, 3; StudcntCouncil 2.
KOZAK. NANCY
128 Evans St.
Intramurals 1 ; Case Rally 1. 2, 3, 4; FTA 2; Pep Squad 2; Dr. Ed. 3; Prom
Committee 3; Student Council 3; Cheerleader 3; Marching Band 3, 4;
Drama 4; Head Cheerleader 4.
— L —
I^BOULIERE. NANCY
64 Purington St.
Case Rally 2.
LAFLEUR. SUSAN
41 Washington St.
Volleyball 3, 4; Case Rally 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Marching Band 4; Col¬
orguard 4.
LANGFIELD. ELIZABETH
43 Harrington Ln.
Class Treasurer 1. 2, 3, 4; Student Council 1; Basketball 1. 2, 3. Softball 1;
Case Rally 1, 2, 3, 4; Majorette 2, 3; Field Hockey 2, 3; Volleyball 2, 3, 4;
Prom Committee 3; Dr Ed. 3; Track 4. Track (^o-Capr. 3; Field Hockey
(Tri-Capt.) 4; Basketball (Tri-Capt.) 4.
LAPC31NTE, COLETTE
291 Hillside Avc.
Chorus 1; Case Rally 1; FTA 2; Explorers Club 2; Pep Squad 2; Student
Council 2; Cheerleader 3; Ski Club 3; National Honor Society 3; RAC 3;
SAC 4. Cross Country 4; Track 4; Yearbook 4,
LAPOINTE. JACQUELINE
60 Hillside Avc.
Breeze 2, 3. 4; National Honor Society 3; AAD Inc. 4; Girls Glee 4; Chorus
4; Concert Choir 4.
LAVIGNE. FRANCIS
21 Summerficld Ave.
Baseball 5.
LEACH. JEFF
866 Ntirth St.
LEAL. JUDY
2530 Riverside Ave.
LEAVER. CHERYL
5 Winslow Avc.
Chorus I, 2, 3; Concert Choir 1, 2; Case Rally I, 2; Marching Band 3; Breeze
4.
LEAVER. NANCY
5 Winslow Avc.
Chorus l. 2. 3; Concert Choir I, 2; Case Rally 1, 2; Marching Band 3; Breeze
4; FTA 4
LEc;OMTH. MARGARET
235 High St
FTA 2, Explorers 2; Case Rally 2; Dr Ed 3. Pep Squad 3; National Honor
Stxiety L 4, Ski Club 4.
LEITH. MARGARET
181
29 Valiev Rd
Dr Ed. 3; ftom Committee 3; Case Rally 3; FTA 3; National Honor Sodcr>
3.4; Breeze 4.
LAMAIRE, PATRiOA
90 Johnson Si.
Case Rally 1, 2, 3. 4; Gymnastics I. 2; Field Hockey 2, 3, 4; Basketball 2;
Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Softball 2; Majorene 3, 4; Marching Band 3,4
LENARTOWICK. MARK
&41 Chase St.
Chairman Case Rally 1. 2, 3; Projectiooist 1, 2. 3, 4; Art Oub 3,4. Drama 3;
Prom Committee 3; Library Aide 3; Student CourKil 4; Thanksgiving Break
fast 4.
LESCAULT, LANCE
Lacerda Ln
LEVESQUE. LUCILLE C
17 Hemicxrk St.
Gymnastics 1, 2. 3, 4. Softball I, 2, 3. 4; Dr. Ed 2; Prom Committee 3; Case
Rally 3; Student Council 4.
LEYLAND, ERNF5T MICHAEL
246 Pleasant St.
Chess 2, 3. 4; Case Rally 2. 3; Explorers Secretary 3, President 4.
LEYLAND. MELINDA JANE
246 Pleasant St.
Case Rally 2, 3; Art Club 3. 4; Dr. Ed. 4; Drama 3; Thanksgiving Breakfast
4.
LIMA, ROBERT
330 Vermont Ave,
Boy Oiuncilor 2. 4; Student Council 2, 3, 4, Case Rally 2, 4; SAA (Vice-
Pres ) 3.
LOISELLE, NANETTE
13 Chandler Dr.
Case Rally 1, 2, 3, 4, (Cheerleader 4; Dr. Ed. 3; Gymnastics 1, 2; FVp Squad 3;
Marchir.g i3and 4.
LUBOLD. RICHARD
38 Clearview Ave.
General Manager J V, Baseball 2; General Manager Varsity Baseball 3, 4;
Dr. Ed 4, Hockey Team 4.
— M —
MACOMBER. PAULA
531 Lees River Ave.
Chorus 1, 2, 3; Pres. 4; Concert (Choir 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4; Girls Glee I, 2,‘ 3, 4;
Case Rally 1,2, AAD Inc. 2, 3.4; Drama 2. 4, Dr. Ed. 3; Colorguard 4.
MARGALETTA, MICHAEL
1 19 Regan Rd.
MARIE, WALTER
3329 County St
MARTEL. ALAN
93 Bayview Ave.
Explorers Club Pres 2; Explorers Club 3, 4, Case Rally 3; National Honor
Society 3, 4
MASSAD.ADELE
7 Mohawk Rd
Case Rally 1, 2. 5. 4, FTA 3, 4; Ski Club 3, 4, Dr. Ed. 3; Prom Committee 3
MATTOS. CYNTHIA J
39 Woodridge St.
Case Rally 2, 3; (Coocen Choir 3, 4; Chorus 2, 3, 4; FTA 2, 3, 4; Ski Club 4;
Explorers 2. 3, National Honor Society 3, 4; Dr Ed. 3; Girls Glee 3-
MATTGS, FRANK M
1 32 Chacc St
MiGEE, RICHARD
71 Gardner Ave.
Explixers 2, 3. 4; Football 2, 3.4; Track 3, 4; National Honor Society 3. 4.
MEDEIROS. DENISE
73 Gardrter Ave
Mixed Chorus 1, 2; Girls Glee I, 2; CotKcn Band 1, 2; Marching Band 1. 2,
3. Girls Field Hockey 1, 2. 3, 4, Basketball 1. 2, 3. 4; Softball 1, 2. 3; Student
Council 1, 2. 4, E>r Ed. 3; Leaders Club 3
MEDEIROS. DONNA
8 Argyle Rd
Case Rally 2, Dr Ed 3, Drama 3
MEDEIROS. GAIL
501 Mass Ave.
Office Helper l;Gymnasius 1 .Student (CourKil 2.
MEDEIROS. .JOHN
36 Rifdo St
Basketball 1, 3
MEDEIROS, PAMELA
33 Delawarr Ave
Concen Qioir 1,2, Mixed Chorus l;C>rls Glee 2, Casa Rally 3. 4
MELLO, THOMAS J
207 Thelma Ave
Dr Ed 3
MELLO. KENNETH S
Regan Rd
Case Rally 2. 3, Scudcni t.'aiuncil 1, 2; President 2, 5, 4. SAC 2, 3, 4. Gass
Pie* 2. 5
MESSIER. MARCS.
i'lC Riverside Ase
MK KIK3L. STEVE
1 t(i Faitma Dr
Kmthall I. 2, a. ( wk 4. Chess Qub !; Eaplurers Chib 1, 2. 3. 4
MILLER. DONNA
73 Midland Rd.
Marching Band 1. 2, 3. 4, Wind Ensemble 1, 2; Concen Choir 1, 2, 4, Girls
Glee 1. 2, 4, Intramurals 1, Case Rally 3, 2; Orchestra 2; CKorus 3, 4; Con¬
cert Band 3, 4. FTA 3.
MOUNSKI.MARY
128 Purington St.
Ose Rally 1. 2, 3, 4; Prom Committee 3. Dr. Ed. 5; FTA 3.
MOORE. RAYMOND
60 North St.
Football 1 . Case Rally 2; Dr. Ed. 3
MOSHER. DAVID H
208 Lees River AvC-
MULLANEY, MICHAEL P.
71 Pleasant St.
Gymnastics 1. 2; Track 2.
MULLEN. SUSAN ANNE
245 Regan Rd.
Folk Group 1 ; Dr Ed. 3
MULLEN. SUSAN D.
339 Perron Ave
Marching Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 1; Girls Glee 2; CThorus 2, 3; Track 3, 4;
Dr. Fxl 3.
MURPHY. CHRISTINE
196 Highview Ave.
Case Rally I, 2, 3, 4; Breeze 1; Concert Choir 2, 3; Giorus 2, 3; Prom Com¬
mittee 3; Student Council 2. 3; National Honor Society 3. 4; FTA 3, 4; Year¬
book 4.
MURPHY. KATHLEEN
121 Mount Hope Rd.
Girl Councilor 1, 2; Case Rally 1. 2. 3; Pep Squad 2; FTA 2, 3, 4; Student
Council 2. 3; Chorus 3; Prom Committee 3; Student Council 2, 3; Chorus 3;
Prom Committee 3; Majorettes 3, 4; Yearbook Editor 4.
— N—
NERENBF.RG, ROSS
27} Highview Ave.
IntramuraU 1, 2, 3, 4; Case Rally 2; Chess 5; Dr Ed. 3.
NOOUEIRA. STEVEN
168 Ivanhoe Ave.
Weather Forecasting Proiect 4.
NUNES, CHERYL
506 South St.
Library Aide 1 ; Case Rally 3; Prom Committee 3.
NUNF-S, EDMOND F
582 South St.
Football 1.2; Matihing Band 1. 3, 4; Baseball 1. 2. 3; Symphonic Band 1. 2,
3.4; Concert Band 1,2, }, 4; Orchestra l;Jazz Band 2; Hockey 3.
— O —
O BRIEN. BARRY
111 Randall Ave.
Dr. Ed. 2.
O’BRIEN, KATHLEEN
74 Domingo Ave.
Case Rally I, 2, 3. 4. Drama 1; FTA 3, 4; Chorus 1, 2, 4; Concert Choir 2. 4;
Ski Gub 2. 3, 4; Dr. Ed. 3.
O’KEEFE. BRADFORD
87 Fatima Dr.
Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Jazz Band 1, 2. 3. 4; Football 4.
OLIVEIRA. DOREEN
243 Marble St.
Case Rally 1. 2. 3; Intramurals 1; Drama 2. 3; Chorus 2. 3; Concert Choir 2.
3; Dr. Ed. 3; Girls Glee 3; Madrigal 3.
OLIVEIRA.JAMES
299 Thelma Ave.
Intramurals 1,2.
OUVEIRA.JEANM
HO Wellesley Dr.
Ecology Club 1; Case Rally 3. 4; Prom Committee 3; An Club 3. 4: Drama
3; Yearbook 4.
OLIVEIRA. JOAN
43 CharIrod Rd
OUVEIRA. PAUL
63 Arruda Ave
Football 1 , 2. 3. 4 . Dr Ed. 3; Cjse Rally 4 . Weightlifting 3-
OLIVEIRA. ROBERT
244 Conn. Ave
Iniramurals 1. 2. 3, 4; Dr. Ed. 3; Case Rally 4.
OR VIS. DENNIS
281 Mass Ave
Iniramurals I. 2. 3. 4; Basketball 1. 2. 3, 4, FoocbaJl 1; Track 1, 2-
OSGA. RANDY
26 Aetna Sc
Cross Country 1, 2. 3. Cape. Cross (^mry 4. indoor and Spring Track 1. 2.
3.4
OUELETTE, ROSEMARY A
861 Lafaycne Sc.
— P—
PALUMBO, PAUL
69 Lilac Ave
Projectionist 1, 2, 3.4; National Honor Society 3. 4.
PARADIS, SHARON
40 Crestview Ave.
Office Aide 1 , Dr. Ed. 3.
PARECE. JOSEPH A.
144 New Hampshire Ave.
Football 1 ; Basketball 1.
PARROTT, DONALD
691 Elm St.
Dr. F.d. 3.
PASKOWSKI. STEPHEN A
74 South Sc.
Football 1 , Hockey 3, 4.
PASTERNAK. DAVID
46 Redwood Rd.
Basketball 1; Imramurals 1, 2; Dr Ed. 2.
PA VO, LOUIS
235 North St.
Chess Gub 4.
PEDDER. ROBERT
181 Sullivan Ave,
Football 1; Gymnastics 1, 2, 3.4; Golf 1, 2, 3. 4; Ski Club 3,4.
PELLETIER. DENISE
362 Westhill Ave
Case Rally I. 2, 3; Explorers 2, 3, 4, Majorettes 2. 3; Marching Barnl 3, 4,
National Honor Society 3; Breeze 4. FTA 3. 4.
PELLITIER, ROBIN
171 Prospect St.
Girls Glee 1; Iniramurals 1; Dr Ed. 3; Prom Committee 3; CiX Rally 3;
Student Council 4.
PERRON. AMY D
249 Lcpcs Rd.
Class Vice President 1, 2; Class President 3; Student Council 1; Breeze 1;
Case Rally I, 2. 3; Intramurals 1, FTA I, 2, 3, 4; Dr Ed. 3, Mixed Chorus 1;
Art Club 3. 4; Photography 2; Prom Committer 3; Marching Band 2, 3;
Flagrwiricr 3; Ski Club 3, 4; Head Flagtwirlcr 4.
PERRY. ADRIAN
29 Barry Ave.
Gymnastics 4.
PERRY. DEWEY
84 Thelma Ave.
PICARD. HOPE
136 Mass, Ave.
Case Rally 3.
PETRILLO, BARBARA
Library Aide 1; Marching Band 2, 3, 4; Chorus 4; Piano Duo 1. 2; Student
Council 2. 4; Colorguard 3; Explorers 4; Dr. Ed. 3; FTA 2. 3. 4; Case Rally
I, 2, 3, 4. National Honor Society 3. 4, Gunner 4, Girls’ State Rep 3; Year
bcK)k 4.
PICHE. DAVID
290 Conn. Ave.
Football 1 ; Ski Gub.
PICKERING. DEBRA A
190 New Jersey Ave.
Case Rally I, 2; Library Aide I; Chorus 1; Concert Choir I, 2; Gymnastics 2;
Dr. Ed. 3; Colorguard 4; Marching Band 4.
P(X3L, EDWARD E.
82 Circle Dr.
Football 1. 3; Ciolf 1, 2, 3, 4.
PRATT. ELAINE
.500 (Thatterton Ave.
PROFIO, MELANIE A
328 Easrview Ave.
Marching Band 1; Orchestra 1. Wind Ensemble 1; Ski Gub 2, 3. 4, FTA 2,
3; Case Rally 3, Prom (Committee 3-
PUCCIO. GARY
59 Highview Ave
Football 2, 3. 4; Baseball 2, 3.4
-Q-
QUINN. STEPHEN
47 Halsey Ave.
Marching Band 1, 2. 3, President 4. Jazz Band I, 2. 3, 4. Concert Band I, 2.
3, 4, Brass Choir 2, 3, 4, ( )rchcstra 1.2. 3. 4, Symphamc Band 4. Truk 4
— R —
RAPO/A. DONNA
1 17 Lafayette Sc
RAPO/A. CHERYL
120 Rapckza St
Case Rally 2; ImramuraU 2: Breeze 3; Office Aide 3. Prom Committee 3.
RAPOSA, DEBRA
19 Paula Sc.
Case Rally 1, 2, Dr Ed 2
RAWNON. SCOTT
63 Willow Ave
Football 1 . Marihing Band 2, Oicu Gub 3
REBELU). DAVID
968 Pleasant Sc.
82
Bnss I
REIS. WAYNE
l(W Sf Michaels Avc.
RENAUD. VALERIE
RS2 Lafayette U
Symphonic Band 1. 2, 3. Pres 4,
Mmhinjc Band 1, 2, 3.4, Dr. Ed- 3, Proi
REZENDES. MICHAEL
78 Fair Dr
RCXiERS, SUSAN E
333 Almy Rd
National Honor Society 3, 4; Breeze 4.
, ROMAGNOLO. RAYMOND A
tMass Avc
ilent Council 1; Basketball 1, Basel
bfcl 2. 3, National Honor Society 3. 4.
RWENFELI), ROBERT
22l|^aceSt
Fo^^tT 1 , Intrarmm^ 1. 2, 3, Proj
Ed. 3. Hockc^peam >; National fi
ROWE. CHARLfiS
, ^39 Eastview Ay«.
%40ter and 5|?ring Track 3 4
ROVigy WaMC V
239 Eai
Orchestra
ROY. ELAINE
I Buff jngt<
[^Rally !r
bJIMOTHY
r Ave.
BaakctlmlU.
U
1,
fifnittee 3, FTA 4, Yearbook.
SOARES. ROBERT
73 Ivy St.
Football I, Choral, 2. 3. 4; Jazz Band 1. 2. 3. 4; Folk Club V, 2. L 4: Case
■rfUlfcp<Ml<itiiiH>ChniTtp<p>| Marching 1 m\
V—
|2, 3. 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Foot-
pt 1, 2, 3, 4; Explorers 2, 3, 4; Dr.
•ricty 3. 4; Yearbook 4.
^Club 1. 2; Football 1.
,4, Fiotball I, 2. 3; Projectionist I
; Chorus Drama 2, 4; Case Rally 2, 3. 4.
&t
4, Student Council 3, 4; Pep Squad^?A?CaebooV >
SABRA. KIM
124 OW CoKiny Avc
Df. Ed 3; FTA 3.4; Case Rajly 3.4; Prenn 0>mmitiec 3
SALVAS. SUSAN
666 Mohawk Rd.
: Office Helper 1; Dr Ed. 3.
[ SANTOsS,EUZA
f UHary Aide E ; < jsc Rally 1. 3; FTA .C 4; Prtim ^SBofnittec 3.
j SENECAL. CAROLYN
f 74 Crestview Ave
' SAURETTE. ROBERT
99 Euclid Ave
SCHOFIEi n. FREDRICK
13H Fole>' Avc.
SCHRODER. OLAF
4l3AImyRd.
Dr Ed. 4 ; Orchestra 4. ,
SEVKiNY. Nancy
41 Washin^t'im Ave j
Ca.v Rally 3 (
SHEA.CATHI.EEN f
33 Plez.*-ant St
FTA 1. ?. Class V. lYo.
4.
SH^tANa-
70 Prospccftr
FTA 1. 2, 3, 4; Stut
Society 3, 4; Dr. Ed.
SHURTLEFF. STE’
1 38 Mohawk Rd.
Track 1
SILVA. SHIRLEY
13 Evans St.
Case Rally t, 2, 3.
SILVIA. DIANE
430 North St.
Dr Ed. 2.
SIMMONS. DA^
Marching Band
Club 1.2. 3. 4;C
Honor Society 3.
SIMONS. GAR]
130 Johnson St.
Football I, 2; Basketball I, 2; Weightlifting I, 2, 5. 4; Case Rally 3, 4;
Student Cc>undl 3; Prom Committee 3.
SLUSACK.CTYNTHIA
61 Chateau Dr
Library Aide 2. FTA 3. 4. Prom Committee 3; Case Rally 3, 4.
SNYDER. BETH
9 Seward Ave.
Field Hockey 1. 2, 3. 4. Basketball 1 ; Pep Si^uad 2; Volleyball 2. 3, 4; Student
Council 2. 3, Drama 3, 4; Ski Club 3. 4. Ose Rally 3.4.
SOARF2S. LIZ
36 E. Cxwnty St
Library Aide 1; Case Rally 1, 2. 3, FTA 2. 3. 4; Breeze 3. 4; Art Qub 3;
Student Council 3
SOARES. TOM
37 Greenwcxxl Ave.
Spring and Winter Track 1, 2; Chess Club 1 ; Case Rally 1
rals 1,2, 3, 4; Tennis 2; Dr. Ed. 3.
SOUZA.JAMES
27 Hannon Ave.
Football 1 ; Dr Ed. 3; Co-op 4.
SOUZA. ROBERTJ.
114 Banville Ave.
Baseball 1.2, 3, 4; Basketball 1
SOUZA.JOANN
71 1 Lafayette St
Dr. Fd._^JMl5m Committee 3;
'ANNEM.
SOUZ^yANGY "
Field
5, •!; else llalfy^i^ril-Cic^n
- sQiafcA. jqcSi^oAyw . J
" ' WHlgh St. , V
Track I, 2. 3. 4 ; Gymnastic T.
ST PIERRE, STEPHEN
23 Hilton Avc.
STASIOWSKl, RUTH
92 John St.
National Honor Society 3, 4 ; Math Team 4 ; FTA 4.
STERN. ROBERT
702 Buffington Avc.
STONE. GARY
73 Perkins St.
Gymnastics 1, 2, 3.
STOWELL, RUSSELL
. .73-Wcllc.skv..Dr
NPEnjOVONNA
2, 3, 4; Intramu-
:>,s Mign M
Chorus 1, 2, 3. 4, Concen Choir 1, 2. 3, 4; AAD 2, 3,
Madrigal Singers 2, 3. 4, Case Rally 2. Drama 2, 3. 4, Breeze
4. Dr Ed. 3
VEZINA. DAVID
23 Glendale Rd
Intramurals 1. 2. 3. 4.
VIANA. PAMELA
1 1 Wm J, Higgins Rd.
Intramurals 1.2; Case Rally 3,
VIANA, PATRICIA
11 Wm. J H%gins Rd.
Intramurals *l^asc Rally 3.
VITAL. DAVID
62 Borland Ave.
Jtball 1, 2; Case Rally I ; HcKkcy Team 3, 4.
iROS, ROXANNE
... ..... . 2. Rally 2,
Ed. 3; FTA 4
rfOiip 1 ;
rK Glee
a>orusil^i.-35 4;
‘,3Prbm Cu^mh^
iSCbraty
r—
SULU VAN, JANE E.
96 Grant Avc.
IntramuraK l.Casc Rally 2, 3: Prom Committee 3; Student Ouncil 3
SYLVAIN. ISLAINE
606 Eastview Avc.
Library Aide I, 2, 3. 4; FTA 2; Office Aide
WALLACE, RICHARD
63 Patton Avc.
Track 2, 3. 4; Cross Country 2. 3. 4; Dr. Ed. 3; Case Rally
Track 3. 4; Leaders Club 4.
WEINER. MIKE
386 Read St.
Football 1 ; Case Rally 1. 2, 3; Track 2, 3; Dr. Ed. 3.
WHITNEY, DOUGLAS
32 Washington Ave.
Intramurals 1,2, 3; Explorers 2, 3, 4; Ski Club 3. 4; Drama 3
-W-ILLi A MSQN, ,IAN£ - - - -
.^27 Buffington St
Student Ouncil 1 , Dt Ed 3; Oase Rally 3
W^NEK, CHAROLETTE . , ' ;
r 22S Regina Avr .
Case Rally 3; Drama 4.
WRIGHT. CHERYL
Riverside Avc.
5 ; Concert Band 3; Orchestra 2, truidance Helper
; Winter
Fii:
t-i
Ai n.i\
ys^isGi
2, 3,4
'ifi-dul
2, 3,4;
lorus 4.
P‘uncil 1; Case Rally 1, 2, 3, 4;
kliing Band 4; Flagtwirler 4.
National Honor
o
TAVARES, ANNE MARIE
103 Homestead Avc.
Library Aide 1, 2; Case Rally 1, 2, 5i'
TEASDALE, NANCY A.
28 Garfield Avc.
Marching Band 1, 2, 3, 4
FTA 3, 4; National Honor
Arntfta
In.rzmurals 1, 2. 3, 4; C^ll^ 1. 2. 3, 4^zskc,b^l 3. G^ack 3. FARRELL, FRANK
1.1 txt 1(1 ttf ,6BaryAve
" FARRELL, KIM
, FELAG,JEFH
168 Taft Avc.
ZUSMAN, LAIkRY
126 Gibbs St.
Marching Band 1, 2, 5. 4; Concen Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Choms !. 2. 3. 4; W'ind
Ensemble 1. 2, 3, 4; Case Rally 1, 2, 3. 4; Debate I ; Wind Quartet 1, 2, 3. 4.
ZYGIEL. LIZ
128 Wcsthill Ave.
Library Aide 1; Case Rally 2, 3, 4; Dr, Ed. 3; Prom ComHk*c3; FFA 4;
National Honor Society 4.
TESSIER, STEVEN
172 Burgess St,
Foo^ll 1 ; Chess Qub2; Intamural^FIockey 3,
TEfERWEN; O'A'RLfigN A/
31 Clearview Avc.
Girls Glee 1 ; Case Rally 3,
A// f a/Z/iT V tfi
phonic Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Ski
azz Band 3; National
jTHIBAULT, ELAl^E^ /
^ l/fesc Rallj^ 1, ^ 3; Explorers 2;_CoIorguari
il^g^JtVDr Ed. 3
^hOmas./e^anda
6.50 Br4yi(in Ayt ./< #
Casc.RMlIy 4ifFiTAfltd, 4; Volleyball 2; National Honor Society 3. 4
Yearbook 4.
THORTON, BARBARA
~32to^w:^
FURTARDO, LYNN
103 Fitzgerald Rd.
Y GALI^T, BRIAN
Tpr
,VFolk GrcHip 1 : Ow>niS 1. 2, 3, A\ Gifts 651«^ U 2. 3, 4,^^>e R:
’ I-t! . 'in-,iralH®,'Kla>rhln^ Bind S: 3; 4; AAD t
phonic Band 4.
THURSfSN, RANDALL
573 Kenneth Ave
Cross Country Gymnastics 1; Wim^jjJfSpring Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Intra-
murals 1, CaseRally^ l, 2, 3,4; An Club 3 , Student Council 2
TOULAN, COL)
597 Mohawk Rd.
Gymnstics 1, 2, 3,4.
Dc EtX
TRUr^AU, PAUL
53 Pen
Case RBv 1 ; Intratnurals ?. :y.^Cj'rosli Football Mana.ger 1. Ski Club 1
4 ; GyniMstics 2,4; -Rodent 7 3, 4 ; leaders Club 3, 4
mtinils 1 , 2, 3, -i , Saident (kxincil 2; Case Rally
KI LET^ fcVNNt tri.» »nl
MARSHALL. DEBORAH
109 Oneil Rd.
XaOflLLP.FREDRICJt
NER.OARY
■lljean Ave.
\mOZO, SI EPHEN
Hil Bray ton Ave.
E^LL GRADliATION
clfcoSTAGNO. RH A
7b waryland Ave.
DlimJY, SARAH
312 ffighview .Avt-
THURSJTO.N. W'AYM
30 Utah Avc*
SCH.MIDT. KAWLv
827 County St
VANPELT.JENNTEER I.
303 Higli .St
-■ffri.':
183
r ^
1
BOB DYLAN’S DREAM
While riding on a train goin’ west,
I fell asleep for to take my rest,
I dreamed a dream that made me sad.
Concerning myself and the first few friends I had.
With half-damp eyes I stared to the room
Where my friends and I spent many an afternoon,
Where we together weathered many a storm.
Laughin’ and singin’ till the early hours of the mom.
By the old wooden stove where our hats were hun^
Our wa|ds were told; our songs were sung, "V
Where we longed for nothing and were quite satisfied
Talkin’ and a-jokin’ bout the world outside.
With haunted hearts through the heat and cold.
We never thought we could ever get old.
We thought we could sit forever in fun
But our chances really were a million to one.
As easy it was\) tell black from white.
It was all that easy to tell wrong from right. '
And our choices wese few and the thought never hit
That the road we ri^vded woiild ever shatter'and split
How many a year has|>assed and gone.
And many a gamble has Been lost and won.
And many a road taken by many a friend.
And each orJi; never seen again.J^ •>
r w^, I wish, i wish in vain,
Th^t we could sit simply in that room again.
Ten' thousand dollars at the drop of a hat.
I’d give it all gladly if our lives could be like that.
184
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